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PROPOSED STANDARD
Updated by:7977,8591,8873,8996Errata Exist
Network Working Group                                   B. Campbell, Ed.Request for Comments: 4975                              Estacado SystemsCategory: Standards Track                                   R. Mahy, Ed.                                                             Plantronics                                                        C. Jennings, Ed.                                                     Cisco Systems, Inc.                                                          September 2007The Message Session Relay Protocol (MSRP)Status of This Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Abstract   This document describes the Message Session Relay Protocol, a   protocol for transmitting a series of related instant messages in the   context of a session.  Message sessions are treated like any other   media stream when set up via a rendezvous or session creation   protocol such as the Session Initiation Protocol.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................42. Conventions .....................................................53. Applicability of MSRP ...........................................54. Protocol Overview ...............................................65. Key Concepts ....................................................95.1. MSRP Framing and Message Chunking ..........................95.2. MSRP Addressing ...........................................105.3. MSRP Transaction and Report Model .........................115.4. MSRP Connection Model .....................................126. MSRP URIs ......................................................146.1. MSRP URI Comparison .......................................156.2. Resolving MSRP Host Device ................................167. Method-Specific Behavior .......................................177.1. Constructing Requests .....................................177.1.1. Sending SEND Requests ..............................187.1.2. Sending REPORT Requests ............................217.1.3. Generating Success Reports .........................227.1.4. Generating Failure Reports .........................237.2. Constructing Responses ....................................247.3. Receiving Requests ........................................257.3.1. Receiving SEND Requests ............................257.3.2. Receiving REPORT Requests ..........................278. Using MSRP with SIP and SDP ....................................278.1. SDP Connection and Media-Lines ............................288.2. URI Negotiations ..........................................298.3. Path Attributes with Multiple URIs ........................308.4. Updated SDP Offers ........................................318.5. Connection Negotiation ....................................318.6. Content Type Negotiation ..................................328.7. Example SDP Exchange ......................................348.8. MSRP User Experience with SIP .............................358.9. SDP Direction Attribute and MSRP ..........................359. Formal Syntax ..................................................3610. Response Code Descriptions ....................................3810.1. 200 ......................................................3810.2. 400 ......................................................3810.3. 403 ......................................................3810.4. 408 ......................................................3910.5. 413 ......................................................3910.6. 415 ......................................................3910.7. 423 ......................................................3910.8. 481 ......................................................3910.9. 501 ......................................................3910.10. 506 .....................................................40Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 200711. Examples ......................................................4011.1. Basic IM Session .........................................4011.2. Message with XHTML Content ...............................4211.3. Chunked Message ..........................................4311.4. Chunked Message with Message/CPIM Payload ................4311.5. System Message ...........................................4411.6. Positive Report ..........................................4411.7. Forked IM ................................................4512. Extensibility .................................................4813. CPIM Compatibility ............................................4814. Security Considerations .......................................4914.1. Secrecy of the MSRP URI ..................................5014.2. Transport Level Protection ...............................5014.3. S/MIME ...................................................5114.4. Using TLS in Peer-to-Peer Mode ...........................5214.5. Other Security Concerns ..................................5315. IANA Considerations ...........................................5515.1. MSRP Method Names ........................................5515.2. MSRP Header Fields .......................................5515.3. MSRP Status Codes ........................................5615.4. MSRP Port ................................................5615.5. URI Schema ...............................................5615.5.1. MSRP Scheme .......................................5615.5.2. MSRPS Scheme ......................................5715.6. SDP Transport Protocol ...................................5715.7. SDP Attribute Names ......................................5815.7.1. Accept Types ......................................5815.7.2. Wrapped Types .....................................5815.7.3. Max Size ..........................................5815.7.4. Path ..............................................5816. Contributors and Acknowledgments ..............................5917. References ....................................................5917.1. Normative References .....................................5917.2. Informative References ...................................60Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 20071.  Introduction   A series of related instant messages between two or more parties can   be viewed as part of a "message session", that is, a conversational   exchange of messages with a definite beginning and end.  This is in   contrast to individual messages each sent independently.  Messaging   schemes that track only individual messages can be described as   "page-mode" messaging, whereas messaging that is part of a "session"   with a definite start and end is called "session-mode" messaging.   Page-mode messaging is enabled in SIP via the SIP [4] MESSAGE method   [22].  Session-mode messaging has a number of benefits over page-mode   messaging, however, such as explicit rendezvous, tighter integration   with other media-types, direct client-to-client operation, and   brokered privacy and security.   This document defines a session-oriented instant message transport   protocol called the Message Session Relay Protocol (MSRP), whose   sessions can be negotiated with an offer or answer [3] using the   Session Description Protocol (SDP) [2].  The exchange is carried by   some signaling protocol, such as SIP [4].  This allows a   communication user agent to offer a messaging session as one of the   possible media-types in a session.  For instance, Alice may want to   communicate with Bob.  Alice doesn't know at the moment whether Bob   has his phone or his IM client handy, but she's willing to use   either.  She sends an invitation to a session to the address of   record she has for Bob, sip:bob@example.com.  Her invitation offers   both voice and an IM session.  The SIP services at example.com   forward the invitation to Bob at his currently registered clients.   Bob accepts the invitation at his IM client, and they begin a   threaded chat conversation.   When a user uses an Instant Messaging (IM) URL,RFC 3861 [32] defines   how DNS can be used to map this to a particular protocol to establish   the session such as SIP.  SIP can use an offer/answer model to   transport the MSRP URIs for the media in SDP.  This document defines   how the offer/answer exchange works to establish MSRP connections and   how messages are sent across the MSRP, but it does not deal with the   issues of mapping an IM URL to a session establishment protocol.   This session model allows message sessions to be integrated into   advanced communications applications with little to no additional   protocol development.  For example, during the above chat session,   Bob decides Alice really needs to be talking to Carol.  Bob can   transfer [21] Alice to Carol, introducing them into their own   messaging session.  Messaging sessions can then be easily integrated   into call-center and dispatch environments using third-party call   control [20] and conferencing [19] applications.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   This document specifies MSRP behavior only for peer-to-peer sessions,   that is, sessions crossing only a single hop.  MSRP relay devices   [23] (referred to herein as "relays") are specified in a separate   document.  An endpoint that implements this specification, but not   the relay specification, will be unable to introduce relays into the   message path, but will still be able to interoperate with peers that   do use relays.2.  Conventions   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [5].   This document consistently refers to a "message" as a complete unit   of MIME or text content.  In some cases, a message is split and   delivered in more than one MSRP request.  Each of these portions of   the complete message is called a "chunk".3.  Applicability of MSRP   MSRP is not designed for use as a standalone protocol.  MSRP MUST be   used only in the context of a rendezvous mechanism meeting the   following requirements:   o  The rendezvous mechanism MUST provide both MSRP URIs associated      with an MSRP session to each of the participating endpoints.  The      rendezvous mechanism MUST implement mechanisms to protect the      confidentiality of these URIs -- they MUST NOT be made available      to an untrusted third party or be easily discoverable.   o  The rendezvous mechanism MUST provide mechanisms for the      negotiation of any supported MSRP extensions that are not      backwards compatible.   o  The rendezvous mechanism MUST be able to natively transport im:      URIs or automatically translate im: URIs [27] into the addressing      identifiers of the rendezvous protocol.   To use a rendezvous mechanism with MSRP, an RFC MUST be prepared that   describes how it exchanges MSRP URIs and meets these requirements   listed here.  This document provides such a description for the use   of MSRP in the context of SIP and SDP.   SIP meets these requirements for a rendezvous mechanism.  The MSRP   URIs are exchanged using SDP in an offer/answer exchange via SIP.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   The exchanged SDP can also be used to negotiate MSRP extensions.   This SDP can be secured using any of the mechanisms available in SIP,   including using the sips mechanism to ensure transport security   across intermediaries and Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail   Extensions (S/MIME) for end-to-end protection of the SDP body.  SIP   can carry arbitrary URIs (including im: URIs) in the Request-URI, and   procedures are available to map im: URIs to sip: or sips: URIs.  It   is expected that initial deployments of MSRP will use SIP as its   rendezvous mechanism.4.  Protocol Overview   MSRP is a text-based, connection-oriented protocol for exchanging   arbitrary (binary) MIME [8] content, especially instant messages.   This section is a non-normative overview of how MSRP works and how it   is used with SIP.   MSRP sessions are typically arranged using SIP the same way a session   of audio or video media is set up.  One SIP user agent (Alice) sends   the other (Bob) a SIP invitation containing an offered session-   description that includes a session of MSRP.  The receiving SIP user   agent can accept the invitation and include an answer session-   description that acknowledges the choice of media.  Alice's session   description contains an MSRP URI that describes where she is willing   to receive MSRP requests from Bob, and vice versa.  (Note: Some lines   in the examples are removed for clarity and brevity.)       Alice sends to Bob:   INVITE sip:bob@biloxi.example.com SIP/2.0   To: <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>   From: <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=786   Call-ID: 3413an89KU   Content-Type: application/sdp   c=IN IP4 atlanta.example.com   m=message 7654 TCP/MSRP *   a=accept-types:text/plain   a=path:msrp://atlanta.example.com:7654/jshA7weztas;tcpCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007       Bob sends to Alice:   SIP/2.0 200 OK   To: <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=087js   From: <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=786   Call-ID: 3413an89KU   Content-Type: application/sdp   c=IN IP4 biloxi.example.com   m=message 12763 TCP/MSRP *   a=accept-types:text/plain   a=path:msrp://biloxi.example.com:12763/kjhd37s2s20w2a;tcp       Alice sends to Bob:   ACK sip:bob@biloxi SIP/2.0   To: <sip:bob@biloxi.example.com>;tag=087js   From: <sip:alice@atlanta.example.com>;tag=786   Call-ID: 3413an89KU                          Figure 1: Session Setup   MSRP defines two request types, or methods.  SEND requests are used   to deliver a complete message or a chunk (a portion of a complete   message), while REPORT requests report on the status of a previously   sent message, or a range of bytes inside a message.  When Alice   receives Bob's answer, she checks to see if she has an existing   connection to Bob.  If not, she opens a new connection to Bob using   the URI he provided in the SDP.  Alice then delivers a SEND request   to Bob with her initial message, and Bob replies indicating that   Alice's request was received successfully.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   MSRP a786hjs2 SEND   To-Path: msrp://biloxi.example.com:12763/kjhd37s2s20w2a;tcp   From-Path: msrp://atlanta.example.com:7654/jshA7weztas;tcp   Message-ID: 87652491   Byte-Range: 1-25/25   Content-Type: text/plain   Hey Bob, are you there?   -------a786hjs2$   MSRP a786hjs2 200 OK   To-Path: msrp://atlanta.example.com:7654/jshA7weztas;tcp   From-Path: msrp://biloxi.example.com:12763/kjhd37s2s20w2a;tcp   -------a786hjs2$                      Figure 2: Example MSRP Exchange   Alice's request begins with the MSRP start line, which contains a   transaction identifier that is also used for request framing.  Next   she includes the path of URIs to the destination in the To-Path   header field, and her own URI in the From-Path header field.  In this   typical case, there is just one "hop", so there is only one URI in   each path header field.  She also includes a message ID, which she   can use to correlate status reports with the original message.  Next   she puts the actual content.  Finally, she closes the request with an   end-line of seven hyphens, the transaction identifier, and a "$" to   indicate that this request contains the end of a complete message.   If Alice wants to deliver a very large message, she can split the   message into chunks and deliver each chunk in a separate SEND   request.  The message ID corresponds to the whole message, so the   receiver can also use it to reassemble the message and tell which   chunks belong with which message.  Chunking is described in more   detail inSection 5.1.  The Byte-Range header field identifies the   portion of the message carried in this chunk and the total size of   the message.   Alice can also specify what type of reporting she would like in   response to her request.  If Alice requests positive acknowledgments,   Bob sends a REPORT request to Alice confirming the delivery of her   complete message.  This is especially useful if Alice sent a series   of SEND requests containing chunks of a single message.  More on   requesting types of reports and errors is described inSection 5.3.   Alice and Bob choose their MSRP URIs in such a way that it is   difficult to guess the exact URI.  Alice and Bob can reject requests   to URIs they are not expecting to service and can correlate the   specific URI with the probable sender.  Alice and Bob can also useCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   TLS [1] to provide channel security over this hop.  To receive MSRP   requests over a TLS protected connection, Alice or Bob could   advertise URIs with the "msrps" scheme instead of "msrp".   MSRP is designed with the expectation that MSRP can carry URIs for   nodes on the far side of relays.  For this reason, a URI with the   "msrps" scheme makes no assertion about the security properties of   other hops, just the next hop.  The user agent knows the URI for each   hop, so it can verify that each URI has the desired security   properties.   MSRP URIs are discussed in more detail inSection 6.   An adjacent pair of busy MSRP nodes (for example, two relays) can   easily have several sessions, and exchange traffic for several   simultaneous users.  The nodes can use existing connections to carry   new traffic with the same destination host, port, transport protocol,   and scheme.  MSRP nodes can keep track of how many sessions are using   a particular connection and close these connections when no sessions   have used them for some period of time.  Connection management is   discussed in more detail inSection 5.4.5.  Key Concepts5.1.  MSRP Framing and Message Chunking   Messages sent using MSRP can be very large and can be delivered in   several SEND requests, where each SEND request contains one chunk of   the overall message.  Long chunks may be interrupted in mid-   transmission to ensure fairness across shared transport connections.   To support this, MSRP uses a boundary-based framing mechanism.  The   start line of an MSRP request contains a unique identifier that is   also used to indicate the end of the request.  Included at the end of   the end-line, there is a flag that indicates whether this is the last   chunk of data for this message or whether the message will be   continued in a subsequent chunk.  There is also a Byte-Range header   field in the request that indicates the overall position of this   chunk inside the complete message.   For example, the following snippet of two SEND requests demonstrates   a message that contains the text "abcdEFGH" being sent as two chunks.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007    MSRP dkei38sd SEND    Message-ID: 4564dpWd    Byte-Range: 1-*/8    Content-Type: text/plain    abcd    -------dkei38sd+    MSRP dkei38ia SEND    Message-ID: 4564dpWd    Byte-Range: 5-8/8    Content-Type: text/plain    EFGH    -------dkei38ia$                  Figure 3: Breaking a Message into Chunks   This chunking mechanism allows a sender to interrupt a chunk part of   the way through sending it.  The ability to interrupt messages allows   multiple sessions to share a TCP connection, and for large messages   to be sent efficiently while not blocking other messages that share   the same connection, or even the same MSRP session.  Any chunk that   is larger than 2048 octets MUST be interruptible.  While MSRP would   be simpler to implement if each MSRP session used its own TCP   connection, there are compelling reasons to conserve connections.   For example, the TCP peer may be a relay device that connects to many   other peers.  Such a device will scale better if each peer does not   create a large number of connections.  (Note that in the above   example, the initial chunk was interruptible for the sake of example,   even though its size is well below the limit for which   interruptibility would be required.)   The chunking mechanism only applies to the SEND method, as it is the   only method used to transfer message content.5.2.  MSRP Addressing   MSRP entities are addressed using URIs.  The MSRP URI schemes are   defined inSection 6.  The syntax of the To-Path and From-Path header   fields each allows for a list of URIs.  This was done to allow the   protocol to work with relays, which are defined in a separate   document, to provide a complete path to the end recipient.  When two   MSRP nodes communicate directly, they need only one URI in the To-   Path list and one URI in the From-Path list.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 20075.3.  MSRP Transaction and Report Model   A sender sends MSRP requests to a receiver.  The receiver MUST   quickly accept or reject the request.  If the receiver initially   accepted the request, it still may then do things that take   significant time to succeed or fail.  For example, if the receiver is   an MSRP to Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) [30]   gateway, it may forward the message over XMPP.  The XMPP side may   later indicate that the request did not work.  At this point, the   MSRP receiver may need to indicate that the request did not succeed.   There are two important concepts here: first, the hop-by-hop delivery   of the request may succeed or fail; second, the end result of the   request may or may not be successfully processed.  The first type of   status is referred to as "transaction status" and may be returned in   response to a request.  The second type of status is referred to as   "delivery status" and may be returned in a REPORT transaction.   The original sender of a request can indicate if they wish to receive   reports for requests that fail, and can independently indicate if   they wish to receive reports for requests that succeed.  A receiver   only sends a success REPORT if it knows that the request was   successfully delivered, and the sender requested a success report.  A   receiver only sends a failure REPORT if the request failed to be   delivered and the sender requested failure reports.      This document describes the behavior of MSRP endpoints.  MSRP      relays will introduce additional conditions that indicate a      failure REPORT should be sent, such as the failure to receive a      positive response from the next hop.   Two header fields control the sender's desire to receive reports.   The Success-Report header field can have a value of "yes" or "no" and   the Failure-Report header field can have a value of "yes", "no", or   "partial".   The combinations of reporting are needed to meet the various   scenarios of currently deployed IM systems.  Success-Report might be   "no" in many public systems to reduce load, but might be "yes" in   certain enterprise systems, such as systems used for securities   trading.  A Failure-Report value of "no" is useful for sending system   messages such as "the system is going down in 5 minutes" without   causing a response explosion to the sender.  A Failure-Report of   "yes" is used by many systems that wish to notify the user if the   message failed.  A Failure-Report of "partial" is a way to report   errors other than timeouts.  Timeout error reporting requires the   sending hop to run a timer and the receiving hop to send anCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   acknowledgment to stop the timer.  Some systems don't want the   overhead of doing this.  "Partial" allows them to choose not to do   so, but still allows error responses to be sent in many cases.      The term "partial" denotes that the hop-by-hop acknowledgment      mechanism that would be required with a Failure-Report value of      "yes" is not invoked.  Thus, each device uses only "part" of the      set of error detection tools available to them.  This allows a      compromise between no reporting of failures at all, and reporting      every possible failure.  For example, with "partial", a sending      device does not have to keep transaction state around waiting for      a positive acknowledgment.  But it still allows devices to report      other types of errors.  The receiving device could still report a      policy violation such as an unacceptable content-type, or an ICMP      error trying to connect to a downstream device.5.4.  MSRP Connection Model   When an MSRP endpoint wishes to send a request to a peer identified   by an MSRP URI, it first needs a transport connection, with the   appropriate security properties, to the host specified in the URI.   If the sender already has such a connection, that is, one associated   with the same host, port, and URI scheme, then it SHOULD reuse that   connection.   When a new MSRP session is created, the initiating endpoint MUST act   as the "active" endpoint, meaning that it is responsible for opening   the transport connection to the answerer, if a new connection is   required.  However, this requirement MAY be weakened if standardized   mechanisms for negotiating the connection direction become available   and are implemented by both parties to the connection.   Likewise, the active endpoint MUST immediately issue a SEND request.   This initial SEND request MAY have a body if the sender has content   to send, or it MAY have no body at all.      The first SEND request serves to bind a connection to an MSRP      session from the perspective of the passive endpoint.  If the      connection is not authenticated with TLS, and the active endpoint      did not send an immediate request, the passive endpoint would have      no way to determine who had connected, and would not be able to      safely send any requests towards the active party until after the      active party sends its first request.   When an element needs to form a new connection, it looks at the URI   to decide on the type of connection (TLS, TCP, etc.) then connects to   the host indicated by the URI, following the URI resolution rules inSection 6.2.  Connections using the "msrps" scheme MUST use TLS.  TheCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   SubjectAltName in the received certificate MUST match the hostname   part of the URI and the certificate MUST be valid according toRFC3280 [16], including having a date that is valid and being signed by   an acceptable certification authority.  At this point, the device   that initiated the connection can assume that this connection is with   the correct host.   The rules on certificate name matching and CA signing MAY be relaxed   when using TLS peer-to-peer.  In this case, a mechanism to ensure   that the peer used a correct certificate MUST be used.  SeeSection14.4 for details.   If the connection used mutual TLS authentication, and the TLS client   presented a valid certificate, then the element accepting the   connection can verify the identity of the connecting device by   comparing the hostname part of the target URI in the SDP provided by   the peer device against the SubjectAltName in the client certificate.   When mutual TLS authentication is not used, the listening device MUST   wait until it receives a request on the connection, at which time it   infers the identity of the connecting device from the associated   session description.   When the first request arrives, its To-Path header field should   contain a URI that the listening element provided in the SDP for a   session.  The element that accepted the connection looks up the URI   in the received request, and determines which session it matches.  If   a match exists, the node MUST assume that the host that formed the   connection is the host to which this URI was given.  If no match   exists, the node MUST reject the request with a 481 response.  The   node MUST also check to make sure the session is not already in use   on another connection.  If the session is already in use, it MUST   reject the request with a 506 response.      If it were legal to have multiple connections associated with the      same session, a security problem would exist.  If the initial SEND      request is not protected, an eavesdropper might learn the URI, and      use it to insert messages into the session via a different      connection.   If a connection fails for any reason, then an MSRP endpoint MUST   consider any sessions associated with the connection as also having   failed.  When either endpoint notices such a failure, it MAY attempt   to re-create any such sessions.  If it chooses to do so, it MUST use   a new SDP exchange, for example, in a SIP re-INVITE.  If a   replacement session is successfully created, endpoints MAY attempt to   resend any content for which delivery on the original session could   not be confirmed.  If it does this, the Message-ID values for theCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   resent messages MUST match those used in the initial attempts.  If   the receiving endpoint receives more than one message with the same   Message-ID, it SHOULD assume that the messages are duplicates.  The   specific action that an endpoint takes when it receives a duplicate   message is a matter of local policy, except that it SHOULD NOT   present the duplicate messages to the user without warning of the   duplication.  Note that acknowledgments as needed based on the   Failure-Report and Success-Report settings are still necessary even   for requests containing duplicate content.   When endpoints create a new session in this fashion, the chunks for a   given logical message MAY be split across the sessions.  However,   endpoints SHOULD NOT split chunks between sessions under non-failure   circumstances.   If an endpoint attempts to re-create a failed session in this manner,   it MUST NOT assume that the MSRP URIs in the SDP will be the same as   the old ones.   A connection SHOULD NOT be closed while there are sessions associated   with it.6.  MSRP URIs   URIs using the "msrp" and "msrps" schemes are used to identify a   session of instant messages at a particular MSRP device, as well as   to identify an MSRP relay in general.  This document describes the   former usage; the latter usage is described in the MSRP relay   specification [23].  MSRP URIs that identify sessions are ephemeral;   an MSRP device will use a different MSRP URI for each distinct   session.  An MSRP URI that identifies a session has no meaning   outside the scope of that session.   An MSRP URI follows a subset of the URI syntax inAppendix A ofRFC3986 [10], with a scheme of "msrp" or "msrps".  The syntax is   described inSection 9.   MSRP URIs are primarily expected to be generated and exchanged   between systems, and are not intended for "human consumption".   Therefore, they are encoded entirely in US-ASCII.   The constructions for "authority", "userinfo", and "unreserved" are   detailed inRFC 3986 [10].  URIs designating MSRP over TCP MUST   include the "tcp" transport parameter.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007      Since this document only specifies MSRP over TCP, all MSRP URIs      herein use the "tcp" transport parameter.  Documents that provide      bindings on other transports should define respective parameters      for those transports.   The MSRP URI authority field identifies a participant in a particular   MSRP session.  If the authority field contains a numeric IP address,   it MUST also contain a port.  The session-id part identifies a   particular session of the participant.  The absence of the session-id   part indicates a reference to an MSRP host device, but does not refer   to a particular session at that device.  A particular value of   session-id is only meaningful in the context of the associated   authority; thus, the authority component can be thought of as   identifying the "authority" governing a namespace for the session-id.   A scheme of "msrps" indicates that the underlying connection MUST be   protected with TLS.   MSRP has an IANA-registered recommended port defined inSection 15.4.   This value is not a default, as the URI negotiation process described   herein will always include explicit port numbers.  However, the URIs   SHOULD be configured so that the recommended port is used whenever   appropriate.  This makes life easier for network administrators who   need to manage firewall policy for MSRP.   The authority component will typically not contain a userinfo   component, but MAY do so to indicate a user account for which the   session is valid.  Note that this is not the same thing as   identifying the session itself.  A userinfo part MUST NOT contain   password information.   The following is an example of a typical MSRP URI:      msrp://host.example.com:8493/asfd34;tcp6.1.  MSRP URI Comparison   In the context of the MSRP protocol, MSRP URI comparisons MUST be   performed according to the following rules:   1.  The scheme MUST match.  Scheme comparison is case insensitive.   2.  If the authority component contains an explicit IP address and/or       port, these are compared for address and port equivalence.       Percent-encoding normalization [10] applies; that is, if any       percent-encoded nonreserved characters exist in the authority       component, they must be decoded prior to comparison.  UserinfoCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007       parts are not considered for URI comparison.  Otherwise, the       authority component is compared as a case-insensitive character       string.   3.  If the port exists explicitly in either URI, then it MUST match       exactly.  A URI with an explicit port is never equivalent to       another with no port specified.   4.  The session-id part is compared as case sensitive.  A URI without       a session-id part is never equivalent to one that includes one.   5.  URIs with different "transport" parameters never match.  Two URIs       that are identical except for transport are not equivalent.  The       transport parameter is case insensitive.   Path normalization [10] is not relevant for MSRP URIs.6.2.  Resolving MSRP Host Device   An MSRP host device is identified by the authority component of an   MSRP URI.   If the authority component contains a numeric IP address and port,   they MUST be used as listed.   If the authority component contains a host name and a port, the   connecting device MUST determine a host address by doing an A or AAAA   DNS query and use the port as listed.   If a connection attempt fails, the device SHOULD attempt to connect   to the addresses returned in any additional A or AAAA records, in the   order the records were presented.      This process assumes that the connection port is always known      prior to resolution.  This is always true for the MSRP URI uses      described in this document, that is, URIs exchanged in the SDP      offer and answer.  The introduction of relays creates situations      where this is not the case.  For example, when a user configures      her client to use a relay, it is desirable that the relay's MSRP      URI is easy to remember and communicate to humans.  Often this      type of MSRP will omit the port number.  Therefore, the relay      specification [23] describes additional steps to resolve the port      number.   MSRP devices MAY use other methods for discovering other such   devices, when appropriate.  For example, MSRP endpoints may use other   mechanisms to discover relays, which are beyond the scope of this   document.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 20077.  Method-Specific Behavior7.1.  Constructing Requests   To form a new request, the sender creates a transaction identifier   and uses this and the method name to create an MSRP request start   line.  The transaction identifier MUST NOT collide with that of other   transactions that exist at the same time.  Therefore, it MUST contain   at least 64 bits of randomness.   Next, the sender places the target path in a To-Path header field,   and the sender's URI in a From-Path header field.  If multiple URIs   are present in the To-Path, the leftmost is the first URI visited;   the rightmost URI is the last URI visited.  The processing then   becomes method specific.  Additional method-specific header fields   are added as described in the following sections.   After any method-specific header fields are added, processing   continues to handle a body, if present.  If the request has a body,   it MUST contain a Content-Type header field.  It may contain other   MIME-specific header fields.  The Content-Type header field MUST be   the last field in the message header section.  The body MUST be   separated from the header fields with an extra CRLF.   Non-SEND requests are not intended to carry message content, and are   therefore not interruptible.  Non-SEND request bodies MUST NOT be   larger than 10240 octets.      Although this document does not discuss any particular usage of      bodies in non-SEND requests, they may be useful in the future for      carrying security or identity information, information about a      message in progress, etc.  The 10K size limit was chosen to be      large enough for most of such applications, but small enough to      avoid the fairness issues caused by sending arbitrarily large      content in non-interruptible method bodies.   A request with no body MUST NOT include a Content-Type or any other   MIME-specific header fields.  A request without a body MUST contain   an end-line after the final header field.  No extra CRLF will be   present between the header section and the end-line.      Requests with no bodies are useful when a client wishes to send      "traffic", but does not wish to send content to be rendered to the      peer user.  For example, the active endpoint sends a SEND request      immediately upon establishing a connection.  If it has nothing to      say at the moment, it can send a request with no body.  Bodiless      requests may also be used in certain applications to keep Network      Address Translation (NAT) bindings alive, etc.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007      Bodiless requests are distinct from requests with empty bodies.  A      request with an empty body will have a Content-Type header field      value and will generally be rendered to the recipient according to      the rules for that type.   The end-line that terminates the request MUST be composed of seven   "-" (minus sign) characters, the transaction ID as used in the start   line, and a flag character.  If a body is present, the end-line MUST   be preceded by a CRLF that is not part of the body.  If the chunk   represents the data that forms the end of the complete message, the   flag value MUST be a "$".  If the sender is aborting an incomplete   message, and intends to send no further chunks in that message, the   flag MUST be a "#".  Otherwise, the flag MUST be a "+".   If the request contains a body, the sender MUST ensure that the end-   line (seven hyphens, the transaction identifier, and a continuation   flag) is not present in the body.  If the end-line is present in the   body, the sender MUST choose a new transaction identifier that is not   present in the body, and add a CRLF if needed, and the end-line,   including the "$", "#", or "+" character.   Some implementations may choose to scan for the closing sequence as   they send the body, and if it is encountered, simply interrupt the   chunk at that point and start a new transaction with a different   transaction identifier to carry the rest of the body.  Other   implementations may choose to scan the data and ensure that the body   does not contain the transaction identifier before they start sending   the transaction.   Once a request is ready for delivery, the sender follows the   connection management (Section 5.4) rules to forward the request over   an existing open connection or create a new connection.7.1.1.  Sending SEND Requests   When an endpoint has a message to deliver, it first generates a new   Message-ID.  The value MUST be highly unlikely to be repeated by   another endpoint instance, or by the same instance in the future.  If   necessary, the endpoint breaks the message into chunks.  It then   generates a SEND request for each chunk, following the procedures for   constructing requests (Section 7.1).      The Message-ID header field provides a unique message identifier      that refers to a particular version of a particular message.  The      term "Message" in this context refers to a unit of content that      the sender wishes to convey to the recipient.  While such a      message may be broken into chunks, the Message-ID refers to the      entire message, not a chunk of the message.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007      The uniqueness of the message identifier is ensured by the host      that generates it.  This message identifier is intended to be      machine readable and not necessarily meaningful to humans.  A      message identifier pertains to exactly one version of a particular      message; subsequent revisions to the message each receive new      message identifiers.  Endpoints can ensure sufficient uniqueness      in any number of ways, the selection of which is an implementation      choice.  For example, an endpoint could concatenate an instance      identifier such as a MAC address, its idea of the number of      seconds since the epoch, a process ID, and a monotonically      increasing 16-bit integer, all base-64 encoded.  Alternately, an      endpoint without an on-board clock could simply use a 64-bit      random number.   Each chunk of a message MUST contain a Message-ID header field   containing the Message-ID.  If the sender wishes non-default status   reporting, it MUST insert a Failure-Report and/or Success-Report   header field with an appropriate value.  All chunks of the same   message MUST use the same Failure-Report and Success-Report values in   their SEND requests.   If success reports are requested, i.e., the value of the Success-   Report header field is "yes", the sending device MAY wish to run a   timer of some value that makes sense for its application and take   action if a success report is not received in this time.  There is no   universal value for this timer.  For many IM applications, it may be   2 minutes while for some trading systems it may be under a second.   Regardless of whether such a timer is used, if the success report has   not been received by the time the session is ended, the device SHOULD   inform the user.   If the value of "Failure-Report" is set to "yes", then the sender of   the request runs a timer.  If a 200 response to the transaction is   not received within 30 seconds from the time the last byte of the   transaction is sent, or submitted to the operating system for   sending, the element MUST inform the user that the request probably   failed.  If the value is set to "partial", then the element sending   the transaction does not have to run a timer, but MUST inform the   user if it receives a non-recoverable error response to the   transaction.  Regardless of the Failure-Report value, there is no   requirement to wait for a response prior to sending the next request.      The treatment of timers for success reports and failure reports is      intentionally inconsistent.  An explicit timeout value makes sense      for failure reports since such reports will usually refer to a      message "chunk" that is acknowledged on a hop-by-hop basis.  ThisCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007      is not the case for success reports, which are end-to-end and may      refer to the entire message content, which can be arbitrarily      large.   If no Success-Report header field is present in a SEND request, it   MUST be treated the same as a Success-Report header field with a   value of "no".  If no Failure-Report header field is present, it MUST   be treated the same as a Failure-Report header field with a value of   "yes".  If an MSRP endpoint receives a REPORT for a Message-ID it   does not recognize, it SHOULD silently ignore the REPORT.   The Byte-Range header field value contains a starting value (range-   start) followed by a "-", an ending value (range-end) followed by a   "/", and finally the total length.  The first octet in the message   has a position of one, rather than a zero.   The first chunk of the message SHOULD, and all subsequent chunks   MUST, include a Byte-Range header field.  The range-start field MUST   indicate the position of the first byte in the body in the overall   message (for the first chunk this field will have a value of one).   The range-end field SHOULD indicate the position of the last byte in   the body, if known.  It MUST take the value of "*" if the position is   unknown, or if the request needs to be interruptible.  The total   field SHOULD contain the total size of the message, if known.  The   total field MAY contain a "*" if the total size of the message is not   known in advance.  The sender MUST send all chunks in Byte-Range   order.  (However, the receiver cannot assume that the requests will   be delivered in order, as intervening relays may have changed the   order.)   There are some circumstances where an endpoint may choose to send an   empty SEND request.  For the sake of consistency, a Byte-Range header   field referring to nonexistent or zero-length content MUST still have   a range-start value of 1.  For example, "1-0/0".   To ensure fairness over a connection, senders MUST NOT send chunks   with a body larger than 2048 octets unless they are prepared to   interrupt them (meaning that any chunk with a body of greater than   2048 octets will have a "*" character in the range-end field).  A   sender can use one of the following two strategies to satisfy this   requirement.  The sender is STRONGLY RECOMMENDED to send messages   larger than 2048 octets using as few chunks as possible, interrupting   chunks (at least 2048 octets long) only when other traffic is waiting   to use the same connection.  Alternatively, the sender MAY simply   send chunks in 2048-octet increments until the final chunk.  Note   that the former strategy results in markedly more efficient use of   the connection.  All MSRP nodes MUST be able to receive chunks of any   size from zero octets to the maximum number of octets they canCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   receive for a complete message.  Senders SHOULD NOT break messages   into chunks smaller than 2048 octets, except for the final chunk of a   complete message.   A SEND request is interrupted while a body is in the process of being   written to the connection by simply noting how much of the message   has already been written to the connection, then writing out the end-   line to end the chunk.  It can then be resumed in a another chunk   with the same Message-ID and a Byte-Range header field range start   field containing the position of the first byte after the   interruption occurred.   SEND requests larger than 2048 octets MUST be interrupted if the   sender needs to send pending responses or REPORT requests.  If   multiple SEND requests from different sessions are concurrently being   sent over the same connection, the device SHOULD implement some   scheme to alternate between them such that each concurrent request   gets a chance to send some fair portion of data at regular intervals   suitable to the application.   The sender MUST NOT assume that a message is received by the peer   with the same chunk allocation with which it was sent.  An   intervening relay could possibly break SEND requests into smaller   chunks, or aggregate multiple chunks into larger ones.   The default disposition of messages is to be rendered to the user.   If the sender wants a different disposition, it MAY insert a Content-   Disposition [9] header field.  Values MAY include any fromRFC 2183   [9] or the IANA registry it defines.  Since MSRP can carry unencoded   binary payloads, transfer encoding is always "binary", and transfer-   encoding parameters MUST NOT be present.7.1.2.  Sending REPORT Requests   REPORT requests are similar to SEND requests, except that report   requests MUST NOT include Success-Report or Failure-Report header   fields, and MUST contain a Status header field.  REPORT requests MUST   contain the Message-ID header field from the original SEND request.   If an MSRP element receives a REPORT for a Message-ID it does not   recognize, it SHOULD silently ignore the REPORT.   An MSRP endpoint MUST be able to generate success REPORT requests.   REPORT requests will normally not include a body, as the REPORT   request header fields can carry sufficient information in most cases.   However, REPORT requests MAY include a body containing additional   information about the status of the associated SEND request.  Such aCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   body is informational only, and the sender of the REPORT request   SHOULD NOT assume that the recipient pays any attention to the body.   REPORT requests are not interruptible.   Success-Report and Failure-Report header fields MUST NOT be present   in REPORT requests.  MSRP nodes MUST NOT send REPORT requests in   response to REPORT requests.  MSRP nodes MUST NOT send MSRP responses   to REPORT requests.   Endpoints SHOULD NOT send REPORT requests if they have reason to   believe the request will not be delivered.  For example, they SHOULD   NOT send a REPORT request for a session that is no longer valid.7.1.3.  Generating Success Reports   When an endpoint receives a message in one or more chunks that   contain a Success-Report value of "yes", it MUST send a success   report or reports covering all bytes that are received successfully.   The success reports are sent in the form of REPORT requests,   following the normal procedures (Section 7.1), with a few additional   requirements.   The receiver MAY wait until it receives the last chunk of a message,   and send a success report that covers the complete message.   Alternately, it MAY generate incremental success REPORTs as the   chunks are received.  These can be sent periodically and cover all   the bytes that have been received so far, or they can be sent after a   chunk arrives and cover just the part from that chunk.      It is helpful to think of a success REPORT as reporting on a      particular range of bytes, rather than on a particular chunk sent      by a client.  The sending client cannot depend on the Byte-Range      header field in a given success report matching that of a      particular SEND request.  For example, an intervening MSRP relay      may break chunks into smaller chunks, or aggregate multiple chunks      into larger ones.  A side effect of this is, even if no relay is      used, the receiving client may report on byte ranges that do not      exactly match those in the original chunks sent by the sender.  It      can wait until all bytes in a message are received and report on      the whole, it can report as it receives each chunk, or it can      report on any other received range.  Reporting on ranges smaller      than the entire message contents allows certain improved user      experiences for the sender.  For example, a sending client could      display incremental status information showing which ranges of      bytes have been acknowledged by the receiver.  However, the choice      on whether to report incrementally is entirely up to the receiving      client.  There is no mechanism for the sender to assert its desire      to receive incremental reports or not.  Since the presence of aCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007      relay can cause the receiver to see a very different chunk      allocation than the sender, such a mechanism would be of      questionable value.   When generating a REPORT request, the endpoint inserts a To-Path   header field containing the From-Path value from the original   request, and a From-Path header field containing the URI identifying   itself in the session.  The endpoint then inserts a Status header   field with a namespace of "000", a status-code of "200", and an   implementation-defined comment phrase.  It also inserts a Message-ID   header field containing the value from the original request.      The namespace field denotes the context of the status-code field.      The namespace value of "000" means the status-code should be      interpreted in the same way as the matching MSRP transaction      response code.  If a future specification uses the status-code      field for some other purpose, it MUST define a new namespace field      value.   The endpoint MUST NOT send a success report for a SEND request that   either contained no Success-Report header field or contained such a   field with a value of "no".  That is, if no Success-Report header   field is present, it is treated identically to one with a value of   "no".7.1.4.  Generating Failure Reports   If an MSRP endpoint receives a SEND request that it cannot process   for some reason, and the Failure-Report header field either was not   present in the original request or had a value of "yes", it SHOULD   simply include the appropriate error code in the transaction   response.  However, there may be situations where the error cannot be   determined quickly, such as when the endpoint is a gateway that waits   for a downstream network to indicate an error.  In this situation, it   MAY send a 200 OK response to the request, and then send a failure   REPORT request when the error is detected.   If the endpoint receives a SEND request with a Failure-Report header   field value of "no", then it MUST NOT send a failure REPORT request,   and MUST NOT send a transaction response.  If the value is "partial",   it MUST NOT send a 200 transaction response to the request, but   SHOULD send an appropriate non-200 class response if a failure   occurs.   As stated above, if no Failure-Report header field is present, it   MUST be treated the same as a Failure-Report header field with a   value of "yes".Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   Construction of failure REPORT requests is identical to that for   success REPORT requests, except the Status header field code field   MUST contain the appropriate error code.  Any error response code   defined in this specification MAY also be used in failure reports.   If a failure REPORT request is sent in response to a SEND request   that contained a chunk, it MUST include a Byte-Range header field   indicating the actual range being reported on.  It can take the   range-start and total values from the original SEND request, but MUST   calculate the range-end field from the actual body data.      This section only describes failure report generation behavior for      MSRP endpoints.  Relay behavior is beyond the scope of this      document, and will be considered in a separate document [23].  We      expect failure reports to be more commonly generated by relays      than by endpoints.7.2.  Constructing Responses   If an MSRP endpoint receives a request that either contains a   Failure-Report header field value of "yes" or does not contain a   Failure-Report header field at all, it MUST immediately generate a   response.  Likewise, if an MSRP endpoint receives a request that   contains a Failure-Report header field value of "partial", and the   receiver is unable to process the request, it SHOULD immediately   generate a response.   To construct the response, the endpoint first creates the response   start line, inserting the appropriate response code and optionally a   comment.  The transaction identifier in the response start line MUST   match the transaction identifier from the original request.   The endpoint then inserts an appropriate To-Path header field.  If   the request triggering the response was a SEND request, the To-Path   header field is formed by copying the first (leftmost) URI in the   From-Path header field of the request. (Responses to SEND requests   are returned only to the previous hop.) For responses to all other   request methods, the To-Path header field contains the full path back   to the original sender.  This full path is generated by copying the   list of URIs from the From-Path of the original request into the To-   Path of the response. (Legal REPORT requests do not request   responses, so this specification doesn't exercise the behavior   described above; however, we expect that extensions for gateways and   relays will need such behavior.)   Finally, the endpoint inserts a From-Path header field containing the   URI that identifies it in the context of the session, followed by the   end-line after the last header field.  Since a response is neverCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   chunked, the continuation flag in the end-line will always contain a   dollar sign ("$").  The response MUST be transmitted back on the same   connection on which the original request arrived.7.3.  Receiving Requests   The receiving endpoint MUST first check the URI in the To-Path to   make sure the request belongs to an existing session.  When the   request is received, the To-Path will have exactly one URI, which   MUST map to an existing session that is associated with the   connection on which the request arrived.  If this is not true, then   the receiver MUST generate a 481 error and ignore the request.  Note   that if the Failure-Report header field had a value of "no", then no   error report would be sent.   Further request processing by the receiver is method specific.7.3.1.  Receiving SEND Requests   When the receiving endpoint receives a SEND request, it first   determines if it contains a complete message or a chunk from a larger   message.  If the request contains no Byte-Range header field, or   contains one with a range-start value of "1", and the closing line   continuation flag has a value of "$", then the request contained the   entire message.  Otherwise, the receiver looks at the Message-ID   value to associate chunks together into the original message.  The   receiver forms a virtual buffer to receive the message, keeping track   of which bytes have been received and which are missing.  The   receiver takes the data from the request and places it in the   appropriate place in the buffer.  The receiver SHOULD determine the   actual length of each chunk by inspecting the payload itself; it is   possible the body is shorter than the range-end field indicates.   This can occur if the sender interrupted a SEND request unexpectedly.   It is worth noting that the chunk that has a termination character of   "$" defines the total length of the message.      It is technically illegal for the sender to prematurely interrupt      a request that had anything other than "*" in the last-byte      position of the Byte-Range header field.  But having the receiver      calculate a chunk length based on actual content adds resilience      in the face of sender errors.  Since this should never happen with      compliant senders, this only has a "SHOULD" strength.   Receivers MUST not assume that the chunks will be delivered in order   or that they will receive all the chunks with "+" flags before they   receive the chunk with the "$" flag.  In certain cases of connection   failure, it is possible for information to be duplicated.  If chunk   data is received that overlaps already received data for the sameCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   message, the last chunk received SHOULD take precedence (even though   this may not have been the last chunk transmitted).  For example, if   bytes 1 to 100 were received and a chunk arrives that contains bytes   50 to 150, this second chunk will overwrite bytes 50 to 100 of the   data that had already been received.  Although other schemes work,   this is the easiest for the receiver and results in consistent   behavior between clients.      There are situations in which the receiver may not be able to give      precedence to the last chunk received when chunks overlap.  For      example, the recipient might incrementally render chunks as they      arrive.  If a new chunk arrives that overlaps with a previously      rendered chunk, it would be too late to "take back" any      conflicting data from the first chunk.  Therefore, the requirement      to give precedence to the most recent chunk is specified at a      "SHOULD" strength.  This requirement is not intended to disallow      applications where this behavior does not make sense.   The seven "-" in the end-line are used so that the receiver can   search for the value "----", 32 bits at a time to find the probable   location of the end-line.  This allows most processors to locate the   boundaries and copy the memory at the same rate that a normal memory   copy could be done.  This approach results in a system that is as   fast as framing based on specifying the body length in the header   fields of the request, but also allows for the interruption of   messages.   What is done with the body is outside the scope of MSRP and largely   determined by the MIME Content-Type and Content-Disposition.  The   body MAY be rendered after the whole message is received or partially   rendered as it is being received.   If the SEND request contained a Content-Type header field indicating   an unsupported media-type, and the Failure-Report value is not "no",   the receiver MUST generate a response with a status code of 415.  All   MSRP endpoints MUST be able to receive the multipart/mixed [15] and   multipart/alternative [15] media-types.   If the Success-Report header field was set to "yes", the receiver   must construct and send one or more success reports, as described inSection 7.1.3.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 20077.3.2.  Receiving REPORT Requests   When an endpoint receives a REPORT request, it correlates the report   to the original SEND request using the Message-ID and the Byte-Range,   if present.  If it requested success reports, then it SHOULD keep   enough state about each outstanding sent message so that it can   correlate REPORT requests to the original messages.   An endpoint that receives a REPORT request containing a Status header   field with a namespace field of "000" MUST interpret the report in   exactly the same way it would interpret an MSRP transaction response   with a response code matching the status-code field.   It is possible to receive a failure report or a failure transaction   response for a chunk that is currently being delivered.  In this   case, the entire message corresponding to that chunk SHOULD be   aborted, by including the "#" character in the continuation field of   the end-line.   It is possible that an endpoint will receive a REPORT request on a   session that is no longer valid.  The endpoint's behavior if this   happens is a matter of local policy.  The endpoint is not required to   take any steps to facilitate such late delivery; i.e., it is not   expected to keep a connection active in case late REPORTs might   arrive.   When an endpoint that sent a SEND request receives a failure REPORT   indicating that a particular byte range was not received, it MUST   treat the session as failed.  If it wishes to recover, it MUST first   re-negotiate the URIs at the signaling level then resend that range   of bytes of the message on the resulting new session.   MSRP nodes MUST NOT send MSRP REPORT requests in response to other   REPORT requests.8.  Using MSRP with SIP and SDP   MSRP sessions will typically be initiated using the Session   Description Protocol (SDP) [2] via the SIP offer/answer mechanism   [3].   This document defines a handful of new SDP parameters to set up MSRP   sessions.  These are detailed below and in the IANA Considerations   section.   An MSRP media-line (that is, a media-line proposing MSRP) in the   session description is accompanied by a mandatory "path" attribute.   This attribute contains a space-separated list of URIs to be visitedCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   to contact the user agent advertising this session description.  If   more than one URI is present, the leftmost URI is the first URI to be   visited to reach the target resource.  (The path list can contain   multiple URIs to allow for the deployment of gateways or relays in   the future.)  MSRP implementations that can accept incoming   connections without the need for relays will typically only provide a   single URI here.   An MSRP media line is also accompanied by an "accept-types"   attribute, and optionally an "accept-wrapped-types" attribute.  These   attributes are used to specify the media-types that are acceptable to   the endpoint.8.1.  SDP Connection and Media-Lines   An SDP connection-line takes the following format:   c=<network type> <address type> <connection address>                  Figure 4: Standard SDP Connection Line   The network type and address type fields are used as normal for SDP.   The connection address field MUST be set to the IP address or fully   qualified domain name from the MSRP URI identifying the endpoint in   its path attribute.   The general format of an SDP media-line is:   m=<media> <port> <protocol> <format list>                     Figure 5: Standard SDP Media Line   An offered or accepted media-line for MSRP over TCP MUST include a   protocol field value of "TCP/MSRP", or "TCP/TLS/MSRP" for TLS.  The   media field value MUST be "message".  The format list field MUST be   set to "*".   The port field value MUST match the port value used in the endpoint's   MSRP URI in the path attribute, except that, as described in [3], a   user agent that wishes to accept an offer, but not a specific media-   line, MUST set the port number of that media-line to zero (0) in the   response.  Since MSRP allows multiple sessions to share the same TCP   connection, multiple m-lines in a single SDP document may share the   same port field value; MSRP devices MUST NOT assume any particular   relationship between m-lines on the sole basis that they have   matching port field values.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007      MSRP devices do not use the c-line address field, or the m-line      port and format list fields to determine where to connect.      Rather, they use the attributes defined in this specification.      The connection information is copied to the c-line and m-line for      purposes of backwards compatibility with conventional SDP usages.      While MSRP could theoretically carry any media-type, "message" is      appropriate.8.2.  URI Negotiations   Each endpoint in an MSRP session is identified by a URI.  These URIs   are negotiated in the SDP exchange.  Each SDP offer or answer that   proposes MSRP MUST contain a "path" attribute containing one or more   MSRP URIs.  The path attribute is used in an SDP a-line, and has the   following syntax:        path = path-label ":" path-list        path-label = "path"        path-list= MSRP-URI *(SP MSRP-URI)                            Figure 6: Path Attribute   where MSRP-URI is an "msrp" or "msrps" URI as defined inSection 6.   MSRP URIs included in an SDP offer or answer MUST include explicit   port numbers.   An MSRP device uses the URI to determine a host address, port,   transport, and protection level when connecting, and to identify the   target when sending requests and responses.   The offerer and answerer each selects a URI to represent itself and   sends that URI to its peer in the SDP document.  Each peer stores the   path value received from the other peer and uses that value as the   target for requests inside the resulting session.  If the path   attribute received from the peer contains more than one URI, then the   target URI is the rightmost, while the leftmost entry represents the   adjacent hop.  If only one entry is present, then it is both the peer   and adjacent hop URI.  The target path is the entire path attribute   value received from the peer.   The following example shows an SDP offer with a session URI of   "msrp://alice.example.com:7394/2s93i9ek2a;tcp"Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007    v=0    o=alice 2890844526 2890844527 IN IP4 alice.example.com    s= -    c=IN IP4 alice.example.com    t=0 0    m=message 7394 TCP/MSRP *    a=accept-types:text/plain    a=path:msrp://alice.example.com:7394/2s93i9ek2a;tcp                 Figure 7: Example SDP with Path Attribute   The rightmost URI in the path attribute MUST identify the endpoint   that generated the SDP document, or some other location where that   endpoint wishes to receive requests associated with the session.  It   MUST be assigned for this particular session, and MUST NOT duplicate   any URI in use for any other session in which the endpoint is   currently participating.  It SHOULD be hard to guess, and protected   from eavesdroppers.  This is discussed in more detail inSection 14.8.3.  Path Attributes with Multiple URIs   As mentioned previously, this document describes MSRP for peer-to-   peer scenarios, that is, when no relays are used.  The use of relays   is described in a separate document [23].  In order to allow an MSRP   device that only implements the core specification to interoperate   with devices that use relays, this document must include a few   assumptions about how relays work.   An endpoint that uses one or more relays will indicate that by   putting a URI for each device in the relay chain into the SDP path   attribute.  The final entry will point to the endpoint itself.  The   other entries will indicate each proposed relay, in order.  The first   entry will point to the first relay in the chain from the perspective   of the peer, that is, the relay to which the peer device, or a relay   operating on its behalf, should connect.   Endpoints that do not wish to insert a relay, including those that do   not support relays at all, will put exactly one URI into the path   attribute.  This URI represents both the endpoint for the session and   the connection point.   Even though endpoints that implement only this specification will   never introduce a relay, they need to be able to interoperate with   other endpoints that do use relays.  Therefore, they MUST be prepared   to receive more than one URI in the SDP path attribute.  When an   endpoint receives more than one URI in a path attribute, only theCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   first entry is relevant for purposes of resolving the address and   port, and establishing the network connection, as it describes the   first adjacent hop.   If an endpoint puts more than one URI in a path attribute, the final   URI in the path attribute (the peer URI) identifies the session, and   MUST not duplicate the URI of any other session in which the endpoint   is currently participating.  Uniqueness requirements for other   entries in the path attribute are out of scope for this document.8.4.  Updated SDP Offers   MSRP endpoints may sometimes need to send additional SDP exchanges   for an existing session.  They may need to send periodic exchanges   with no change to refresh state in the network, for example, SIP   session timers or the SIP UPDATE [24] request.  They may need to   change some other stream in a session without affecting the MSRP   stream, or they may need to change an MSRP stream without affecting   some other stream.   Either peer may initiate an updated exchange at any time.  The   endpoint that sends the new offer assumes the role of offerer for all   purposes.  The answerer MUST respond with a path attribute that   represents a valid path to itself at the time of the updated   exchange.  This new path may be the same as its previous path, but   may be different.  The new offerer MUST NOT assume that the peer will   answer with the same path it used previously.   If either party wishes to send an SDP document that changes nothing   at all, then it MUST use the same o-line as in the previous exchange.8.5.  Connection Negotiation   Previous versions of this document included a mechanism to negotiate   the direction for any required TCP connection.  The mechanism was   loosely based on the Connection-Oriented Media (COMEDIA) [26] work   done by the MMUSIC working group.  The primary motivation was to   allow MSRP sessions to succeed in situations where the offerer could   not accept connections but the answerer could.  For example, the   offerer might be behind a NAT, while the answerer might have a   globally routable address.   The SIMPLE working group chose to remove that mechanism from MSRP, as   it added a great deal of complexity to connection management.   Instead, MSRP now specifies a default connection direction.  The   party that sent the original offer is responsible for connecting to   its peer.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 20078.6.  Content Type Negotiation   An SDP media-line proposing MSRP MUST be accompanied by an accept-   types attribute.   An entry of "*" in the accept-types attribute indicates that the   sender may attempt to send content with media-types that have not   been explicitly listed.  Likewise, an entry with an explicit type and   a "*" character as the subtype indicates that the sender may attempt   to send content with any subtype of that type.  If the receiver   receives an MSRP request and is able to process the media-type, it   does so.  If not, it will respond with a 415 response.  Note that all   explicit entries SHOULD be considered preferred over any non-listed   types.  This feature is needed as, otherwise, the list of formats for   rich IM devices may be prohibitively large.   This specification requires the support of certain data formats.   Mandatory formats MUST be signaled like any other, either explicitly   or by the use of a "*".   The accept-types attribute may include container types, that is, MIME   formats that contain other types internally.  If compound types are   used, the types listed in the accept-types attribute may be used as   the root payload or may be wrapped in a listed container type.  Any   container types MUST also be listed in the accept-types attribute.   Occasionally, an endpoint will need to specify a MIME media-type that   can only be used if wrapped inside a listed container type.   Endpoints MAY specify media-types that are only allowed when wrapped   inside compound types using the "accept-wrapped-types" attribute in   an SDP a-line.   The semantics for accept-wrapped-types are identical to those of the   accept-types attribute, with the exception that the specified types   may only be used when wrapped inside container types listed in the   accept-types attribute.  Only types listed in the accept-types   attribute may be used as the "root" type for the entire body.  Since   any type listed in accept-types may be both used as a root body and   wrapped in other bodies, format entries from accept-types SHOULD NOT   be repeated in this attribute.   This approach does not allow for specifying distinct lists of   acceptable wrapped types for different types of containers.  If an   endpoint understands a media-type in the context of one wrapper, it   is assumed to understand it in the context of any other acceptable   wrappers, subject to any constraints defined by the wrapper types   themselves.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007      The approach of specifying types that are only allowed inside of      containers separately from the primary payload types allows an      endpoint to force the use of certain wrappers.  For example, a      Common Presence and Instant Messaging (CPIM) [12] gateway device      may require all messages to be wrapped inside message/cpim bodies,      but may allow several content types inside the wrapper.  If the      gateway were to specify the wrapped types in the accept-types      attribute, its peer might attempt to use those types without the      wrapper.   If the recipient of an offer does not understand any of the payload   types indicated in the offered SDP, it SHOULD indicate that using the   appropriate mechanism of the rendezvous protocol.  For example, in   SIP, it SHOULD return a SIP 488 response.   An MSRP endpoint MUST NOT send content of a type not signaled by the   peer in either an accept-types or an accept-wrapped-types attribute.   Furthermore, it MUST NOT send a top-level (i.e., not wrapped) MIME   document of a type not signaled in the accept-types attribute.  In   either case, the signaling could be explicit, or implicit through the   use of the "*" character.   An endpoint MAY indicate the maximum size message it wishes to   receive using the max-size a-line attribute.  Max-size refers to the   complete message in octets, not the size of any one chunk.  Senders   SHOULD NOT exceed the max-size limit for any message sent in the   resulting session.  However, the receiver should consider max-size   value as a hint.   Media format entries may include parameters.  The interpretation of   such parameters varies between media-types.  For the purposes of   media-type negotiation, a format-entry with one or more parameters is   assumed to match the same format-entry with no parameters.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   The formal syntax for these attributes is as follows:        accept-types = accept-types-label ":" format-list        accept-types-label = "accept-types"        accept-wrapped-types = wrapped-types-label ":" format-list        wrapped-types-label = "accept-wrapped-types"        format-list = format-entry *( SP format-entry)        format-entry = ( ( (type "/" subtype)                         / (type "/" "*") )                         *( ";" type-param ) )                        / ("*")        type = token        subtype = token        type-param = parm-attribute "=" parm-value        parm-attribute = token        parm-value = token / quoted-string        max-size = max-size-label ":" max-size-value        max-size-label = "max-size"        max-size-value = 1*(DIGIT) ; max size in octets                           Figure 8: Attribute Syntax8.7.  Example SDP Exchange   Endpoint A wishes to invite Endpoint B to an MSRP session.  A offers   the following session description:    v=0    o=usera 2890844526 2890844527 IN IP4 alice.example.com    s= -    c=IN IP4 alice.example.com    t=0 0    m=message 7394 TCP/MSRP *    a=accept-types:message/cpim text/plain text/html    a=path:msrp://alice.example.com:7394/2s93i93idj;tcp                       Figure 9: SDP from Endpoint ACampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   B responds with its own URI:    v=0    o=userb 2890844530 2890844532 IN IP4 bob.example.com    s= -    c=IN IP4 bob.example.com    t=0 0    m=message 8493 TCP/MSRP *    a=accept-types:message/cpim text/plain    a=path:msrp://bob.example.com:8493/si438dsaodes;tcp                       Figure 10: SDP from Endpoint B8.8.  MSRP User Experience with SIP   In typical SIP applications, when an endpoint receives an INVITE   request, it alerts the user, and waits for user input before   responding.  This is analogous to the typical telephone user   experience, where the callee "answers" the call.   In contrast, the typical user experience for instant messaging   applications is that the initial received message is immediately   displayed to the user, without waiting for the user to "join" the   conversation.  Therefore, the principle of least surprise would   suggest that MSRP endpoints using SIP signaling SHOULD allow a mode   where the endpoint quietly accepts the session and begins displaying   messages.      This guideline may not make sense for all situations, such as for      mixed-media applications, where both MSRP and audio sessions are      offered in the same INVITE.  In general, good application design      should take precedence.   SIP INVITE requests may be forked by a SIP proxy, resulting in more   than one endpoint receiving the same INVITE.  SIP early media [29]   techniques can be used to establish a preliminary session with each   endpoint so the initial message(s) are displayed on each endpoint,   and canceling the INVITE transaction for any endpoints that do not   send MSRP traffic after some period of time, so that they cease   receiving MSRP traffic from the inviter.8.9.  SDP Direction Attribute and MSRP   SDP defines a number of attributes that modify the direction of media   flows.  These are the "sendonly", "recvonly", "inactive", and   "sendrecv" attributes.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   If a "sendonly" or "recvonly" attribute modifies an MSRP media   description line, the attribute indicates the direction of MSRP SEND   requests that contain regular message payloads.  Unless otherwise   specified, these attributes do not affect the direction of other   types of requests, such as REPORT.  SEND requests that contain some   kind of control or reporting protocol rather than regular message   payload (e.g., Instant Message Delivery Notification (IMDN) reports)   should be generated according to the protocol rules as if no   direction attribute were present.9.  Formal Syntax   MSRP is a text protocol that uses the UTF-8 [14] transformation   format.   The following syntax specification uses the augmented Backus-Naur   Form (BNF) as described inRFC 4234 [6].   msrp-req-or-resp = msrp-request / msrp-response   msrp-request = req-start headers [content-stuff] end-line   msrp-response = resp-start headers end-line   req-start  = pMSRP SP transact-id SP method CRLF   resp-start = pMSRP SP transact-id SP status-code [SP comment] CRLF   comment = utf8text   pMSRP = %x4D.53.52.50 ; MSRP in caps   transact-id = ident   method = mSEND / mREPORT / other-method   mSEND = %x53.45.4e.44 ; SEND in caps   mREPORT = %x52.45.50.4f.52.54; REPORT in caps   other-method = 1*UPALPHA   status-code = 3DIGIT ; any code defined in this document                        ; or an extension document   MSRP-URI = msrp-scheme "://" authority       ["/" session-id] ";" transport *( ";" URI-parameter)                        ; authority as defined inRFC3986   msrp-scheme = "msrp" / "msrps"   session-id = 1*( unreserved / "+" / "=" / "/" )                        ; unreserved as defined inRFC3986   transport = "tcp" / 1*ALPHANUM   URI-parameter = token ["=" token]   headers = To-Path CRLF From-Path CRLF 1*( header CRLF )Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   header  =   Message-ID    / Success-Report    / Failure-Report    / Byte-Range    / Status    / ext-header   To-Path = "To-Path:" SP MSRP-URI *( SP MSRP-URI )   From-Path = "From-Path:" SP MSRP-URI *( SP MSRP-URI )   Message-ID = "Message-ID:" SP ident   Success-Report = "Success-Report:" SP ("yes" / "no" )   Failure-Report = "Failure-Report:" SP ("yes" / "no" / "partial" )   Byte-Range = "Byte-Range:" SP range-start "-" range-end "/" total   range-start = 1*DIGIT   range-end   = 1*DIGIT / "*"   total       = 1*DIGIT / "*"   Status = "Status:" SP namespace SP status-code [SP comment]   namespace = 3(DIGIT); "000" for all codes defined in this document.   ident = ALPHANUM  3*31ident-char   ident-char = ALPHANUM / "." / "-" / "+" / "%" / "="   content-stuff = *(Other-Mime-header CRLF)                   Content-Type 2CRLF data CRLF   Content-Type = "Content-Type:" SP media-type   media-type = type "/" subtype *( ";" gen-param )   type = token   subtype = token   gen-param = pname [ "=" pval ]   pname = token   pval  = token / quoted-string   token = 1*(%x21 / %x23-27 / %x2A-2B / %x2D-2E              / %x30-39 / %x41-5A / %x5E-7E)              ; token is compared case-insensitive   quoted-string = DQUOTE *(qdtext / qd-esc) DQUOTE   qdtext = SP / HTAB / %x21 / %x23-5B / %x5D-7E               / UTF8-NONASCII   qd-esc = (BACKSLASH BACKSLASH) / (BACKSLASH DQUOTE)   BACKSLASH = "\"   UPALPHA  = %x41-5A   ALPHANUM = ALPHA / DIGITCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   Other-Mime-header = (Content-ID    / Content-Description    / Content-Disposition    / mime-extension-field)       ; Content-ID, and Content-Description are defined inRFC2045.       ; Content-Disposition is defined inRFC2183       ; MIME-extension-field indicates additional MIME extension       ; header fields as described inRFC2045   data = *OCTET   end-line = "-------" transact-id continuation-flag CRLF   continuation-flag = "+" / "$" / "#"   ext-header = hname ":" SP hval CRLF   hname = ALPHA *token   hval = utf8text   utf8text = *(HTAB / %x20-7E / UTF8-NONASCII)   UTF8-NONASCII = %xC0-DF 1UTF8-CONT                 / %xE0-EF 2UTF8-CONT                 / %xF0-F7 3UTF8-CONT                 / %xF8-Fb 4UTF8-CONT                 / %xFC-FD 5UTF8-CONT   UTF8-CONT     = %x80-BF                           Figure 11: MSRP ABNF10.  Response Code Descriptions   This section summarizes the semantics of various response codes that   may be used in MSRP transaction responses.  These codes may also be   used in the Status header field in REPORT requests.10.1.  200   The 200 response code indicates a successful transaction.10.2.  400   A 400 response indicates that a request was unintelligible.  The   sender may retry the request after correcting the error.10.3.  403   A 403 response indicates that the attempted action is not allowed.   The sender should not try the request again.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 200710.4.  408   A 408 response indicates that a downstream transaction did not   complete in the allotted time.  It is never sent by any elements   described in this specification.  However, 408 is used in the MSRP   relay extension; therefore, MSRP endpoints may receive it.  An   endpoint MUST treat a 408 response in the same manner as it would   treat a local timeout.10.5.  413   A 413 response indicates that the receiver wishes the sender to stop   sending the particular message.  Typically, a 413 is sent in response   to a chunk of an undesired message.   If a message sender receives a 413 in a response, or in a REPORT   request, it MUST NOT send any further chunks in the message, that is,   any further chunks with the same Message-ID value.  If the sender   receives the 413 while in the process of sending a chunk, and the   chunk is interruptible, the sender MUST interrupt it.10.6.  415   A 415 response indicates that the SEND request contained a media type   that is not understood by the receiver.  The sender should not send   any further messages with the same content-type for the duration of   the session.10.7.  423   A 423 response indicates that one of the requested parameters is out   of bounds.  It is used by the relay extensions to this document.10.8.  481   A 481 response indicates that the indicated session does not exist.   The sender should terminate the session.10.9.  501   A 501 response indicates that the recipient does not understand the   request method.      The 501 response code exists to allow some degree of method      extensibility.  It is not intended as a license to ignore methods      defined in this document; rather, it is a mechanism to report lack      of support of extension methods.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 200710.10.  506   A 506 response indicates that a request arrived on a session that is   already bound to another network connection.  The sender should cease   sending messages for that session on this connection.11.  Examples11.1.  Basic IM Session   This section shows an example flow for the most common scenario.  The   example assumes SIP is used to transport the SDP exchange.  Details   of the SIP messages and SIP proxy infrastructure are omitted for the   sake of brevity.  In the example, assume that the offerer is   sip:alice@example.com and the answerer is sip:bob@example.com.           Alice                     Bob             |                        |             |                        |             |(1) (SIP) INVITE        |             |----------------------->|             |(2) (SIP) 200 OK        |             |<-----------------------|             |(3) (SIP) ACK           |             |----------------------->|             |(4) (MSRP) SEND         |             |----------------------->|             |(5) (MSRP) 200 OK       |             |<-----------------------|             |(6) (MSRP) SEND         |             |<-----------------------|             |(7) (MSRP) 200 OK       |             |----------------------->|             |(8) (SIP) BYE           |             |----------------------->|             |(9) (SIP) 200 OK        |             |<-----------------------|             |                        |             |                        |                        Figure 12: Basic IM Session ExampleCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   1.  Alice constructs a local URI of       msrp://alicepc.example.com:7777/iau39soe2843z;tcp .       Alice->Bob (SIP): INVITE sip:bob@example.com       v=0       o=alice 2890844557 2890844559 IN IP4 alicepc.example.com       s= -       c=IN IP4 alicepc.example.com       t=0 0       m=message 7777 TCP/MSRP *       a=accept-types:text/plain       a=path:msrp://alicepc.example.com:7777/iau39soe2843z;tcp   2.  Bob listens on port 8888, and sends the following response:       Bob->Alice (SIP): 200 OK       v=0       o=bob 2890844612 2890844616 IN IP4 bob.example.com       s= -       c=IN IP4 bob.example.com       t=0 0       m=message 8888 TCP/MSRP *       a=accept-types:text/plain       a=path:msrp://bob.example.com:8888/9di4eae923wzd;tcp   3.  Alice->Bob (SIP): ACK sip:bob@example.com   4.  (Alice opens connection to Bob.)  Alice->Bob (MSRP):       MSRP d93kswow SEND       To-Path: msrp://bob.example.com:8888/9di4eae923wzd;tcp       From-Path: msrp://alicepc.example.com:7777/iau39soe2843z;tcp       Message-ID: 12339sdqwer       Byte-Range: 1-16/16       Content-Type: text/plain       Hi, I'm Alice!       -------d93kswow$   5.  Bob->Alice (MSRP):       MSRP d93kswow 200 OK       To-Path: msrp://alicepc.example.com:7777/iau39soe2843z;tcp       From-Path: msrp://bob.example.com:8888/9di4eae923wzd;tcp       -------d93kswow$Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   6.  Bob->Alice (MSRP):       MSRP dkei38sd SEND       To-Path: msrp://alicepc.example.com:7777/iau39soe2843z;tcp       From-Path: msrp://bob.example.com:8888/9di4eae923wzd;tcp       Message-ID: 456s9wlk3       Byte-Range: 1-21/21       Content-Type: text/plain       Hi, Alice!  I'm Bob!       -------dkei38sd$   7.  Alice->Bob (MSRP):       MSRP dkei38sd 200 OK       To-Path: msrp://bob.example.com:8888/9di4eae923wzd;tcp       From-Path: msrp://alicepc.example.com:7777/iau39soe2843z;tcp       -------dkei38sd$   8.  Alice->Bob (SIP): BYE sip:bob@example.com       Alice invalidates local session state.   9.  Bob invalidates local state for the session.       Bob->Alice (SIP): 200 OK11.2.  Message with XHTML Content   MSRP dsdfoe38sd SEND   To-Path: msrp://alice.example.com:7777/iau39soe2843z;tcp   From-Path: msrp://bob.example.com:8888/9di4eae923wzd;tcp   Message-ID: 456so39s   Byte-Range: 1-374/374   Content-Type: application/xhtml+xmlCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 42]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>   <!DOCTYPE html   PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"   "_http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd_">   <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">     <head>       <title>FY2005 Results</title>   </head>     <body>      <p>See the results at <a   href="http://example.org/">example.org</a>.</p>     </body>   </html>   -------dsdfoe38sd$                   Figure 13: Example Message with XHTML11.3.  Chunked Message   For an example of a chunked message, see the example inSection 5.1.11.4.  Chunked Message with Message/CPIM Payload   This example shows a chunked message containing a CPIM message that   wraps a text/plain payload.  It is worth noting that MSRP considers   the complete CPIM message before chunking the message; thus, the CPIM   headers are included in only the first chunk.  The MSRP Content-Type   and Byte-Range headers, present in both chunks, refer to the whole   CPIM message.      MSRP d93kswow SEND      To-Path: msrp://bobpc.example.com:8888/9di4eae923wzd;tcp      From-Path: msrp://alicepc.example.com:7654/iau39soe2843z;tcp      Message-ID: 12339sdqwer      Byte-Range: 1-137/148      Content-Type: message/cpim      To: Bob <sip:bob@example.com>      From: Alice <sip:alice@example.com>      DateTime: 2006-05-15T15:02:31-03:00      Content-Type: text/plain      ABCD      -------d93kswow+                            Figure 14: First ChunkCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 43]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   Alice sends the second and last chunk.      MSRP op2nc9a SEND      To-Path: msrp://bobpc.example.com:8888/9di4eae923wzd;tcp      From-Path: msrp://alicepc.example.com:7654/iau39soe2843z;tcp      Message-ID: 12339sdqwer      Byte-Range: 138-148/148      Content-Type: message/cpim      1234567890      -------op2nc9a$                           Figure 15: Second Chunk11.5.  System Message   Sysadmin->Alice (MSRP):   MSRP d93kswow SEND   To-Path: msrp://alicepc.example.com:8888/9di4eae923wzd;tcp   From-Path: msrp://example.com:7777/iau39soe2843z;tcp   Message-ID: 12339sdqwer   Byte-Range: 1-38/38   Failure-Report: no   Success-Report: no   Content-Type: text/plain   This conference will end in 5 minutes   -------d93kswow$11.6.  Positive Report   Alice->Bob (MSRP):   MSRP d93kswow SEND   To-Path: msrp://bob.example.com:8888/9di4eae923wzd;tcp   From-Path: msrp://alicepc.example.com:7777/iau39soe2843z;tcp   Message-ID: 12339sdqwer   Byte-Range: 1-106/106   Success-Report: yes   Failure-Report: no   Content-Type: text/htmlCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 44]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   <html><body>   <p>Here is that important link...   <a href="http://www.example.com/foobar">foobar</a>   </p>   </body></html>   -------d93kswow$                      Figure 16: Initial SEND Request   Bob->Alice (MSRP):   MSRP dkei38sd REPORT   To-Path: msrp://alicepc.example.com:7777/iau39soe2843z;tcp   From-Path: msrp://bob.example.com:8888/9di4eae923wzd;tcp   Message-ID: 12339sdqwer   Byte-Range: 1-106/106   Status: 000 200 OK   -------dkei38sd$                         Figure 17: Success Report11.7.  Forked IM   Traditional IM systems generally do a poor job of handling multiple   simultaneous IM clients online for the same person.  While some do a   better job than many existing systems, handling of multiple clients   is fairly crude.  This becomes a much more significant issue when   always-on mobile devices are available, but it is desirable to use   them only if another IM client is not available.   Using SIP makes rendezvous decisions explicit, deterministic, and   very flexible.  In contrast, "page-mode" IM systems use implicit   implementation-specific decisions that IM clients cannot influence.   With SIP session-mode messaging, rendezvous decisions can be under   control of the client in a predictable, interoperable way for any   host that implements callee capabilities [31].  As a result,   rendezvous policy is managed consistently for each address of record.   The following example shows Juliet with several IM clients where she   can be reached.  Each of these has a unique SIP contact and MSRP   session.  The example takes advantage of SIP's capability to "fork"   an invitation to several contacts in parallel, in sequence, or in   combination.  Juliet has registered from her chamber, the balcony,   her PDA, and as a last resort, you can leave a message with her   nurse.  Juliet's contacts are listed below.  The q-values express   relative preference (q=1.0 is the highest preference).Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 45]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   When Romeo opens his IM program, he selects Juliet and types the   message "art thou hither?" (instead of "you there?").  His client   sends a SIP invitation to sip:juliet@thecapulets.example.com.  The   proxy there tries first the balcony and the chamber simultaneously.   A client is running on each of those systems, both of which set up   early sessions of MSRP with Romeo's client.  The client automatically   sends the message over MSRP to the two MSRP URIs involved.  After a   delay of a several seconds with no reply or activity from Juliet, the   proxy cancels the invitation at her first two contacts, and forwards   the invitation on to Juliet's PDA.  Since her father is talking to   her about her wedding, she selects "Do Not Disturb" on her PDA, which   sends a "Busy Here" response.  The proxy then tries the nurse, who   answers and tells Romeo what is going on.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 46]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007    Romeo       Juliet's     Juliet/      Juliet/      Juliet/     Nurse                 Proxy       balcony      chamber       PDA      |            |            |            |           |           |      |--INVITE--->|            |            |           |           |      |            |--INVITE--->|            |           |           |      |            |<----180----|            |           |           |      |<----180----|            |            |           |           |      |---PRACK---------------->|            |           |           |      |<----200-----------------|            |           |           |      |<===Early MSRP Session==>| art thou hither?       |           |      |            |            |            |           |           |      |            |--INVITE---------------->|           |           |      |            |<----180-----------------|           |           |      |<----180----|            |            |           |           |      |---PRACK----------------------------->|           |           |      |<----200------------------------------|           |           |      |<========Early MSRP Session==========>| art thou hither?      |      |            |            |            |           |           |      |            |            |            |           |           |      |            | .... Time Passes ....   |           |           |      |            |            |            |           |           |      |            |            |            |           |           |      |            |--CANCEL--->|            |           |           |      |            |<---200-----|            |           |           |      |            |<---487-----|            |           |           |      |            |----ACK---->|            |           |           |      |            |--CANCEL---------------->|           |           |      |            |<---200------------------|           |           |      |            |<---487------------------|           |           |      |            |----ACK----------------->|           |           |      |            |--INVITE---------------------------->|  romeo wants      |            |            |            |           |  to IM w/ you      |            |<---486 Busy Here--------------------|           |      |            |----ACK----------------------------->|           |      |            |            |            |           |           |      |            |--INVITE---------------------------------------->|      |            |<---200 OK---------------------------------------|      |<--200 OK---|            |            |           |           |      |---ACK------------------------------------------------------->|      |<================MSRP Session================================>|      |            |            |            |           |           |      |                                         Hi Romeo, Juliet is  |      |                                         with her father now  |      |                                         can I take a message?|      |                                                              |      |  Tell her to go to confession tomorrow....                   |                        Figure 18: Forking ExampleCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 47]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 200712.  Extensibility   MSRP was designed to be only minimally extensible.  New MSRP methods,   header fields, and status codes can be defined in standards-track   RFCs.  MSRP does not contain a version number or any negotiation   mechanism to require or discover new features.  If an extension is   specified in the future that requires negotiation, the specification   will need to describe how the extension is to be negotiated in the   encapsulating signaling protocol.  If a non-interoperable update or   extension occurs in the future, it will be treated as a new protocol,   and MUST describe how its use will be signaled.   In order to allow extension header fields without breaking   interoperability, if an MSRP device receives a request or response   containing a header field that it does not understand, it MUST ignore   the header field and process the request or response as if the header   field was not present.  If an MSRP device receives a request with an   unknown method, it MUST return a 501 response.   MSRP was designed to use lists of URIs instead of a single URI in the   To-Path and From-Path header fields in anticipation of relay or   gateway functionality being added.  In addition, "msrp" and "msrps"   URIs can contain parameters that are extensible.13.  CPIM Compatibility   MSRP sessions may go to a gateway to other Common Profile for Instant   Messaging (CPIM) [27] compatible protocols.  If this occurs, the   gateway MUST maintain session state, and MUST translate between the   MSRP session semantics and CPIM semantics, which do not include a   concept of sessions.  Furthermore, when one endpoint of the session   is a CPIM gateway, instant messages SHOULD be wrapped in   "message/cpim" [12] bodies.  Such a gateway MUST include   "message/cpim" as the first entry in its SDP accept-types attribute.   MSRP endpoints sending instant messages to a peer that has included   "message/cpim" as the first entry in the accept-types attribute   SHOULD encapsulate all instant message bodies in "message/ cpim"   wrappers.  All MSRP endpoints MUST support the message/cpim type, and   SHOULD support the S/MIME[7] features of that format.   If a message is to be wrapped in a message/cpim envelope, the   wrapping MUST be done prior to breaking the message into chunks, if   needed.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 48]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   All MSRP endpoints MUST recognize the From, To, DateTime, and Require   header fields as defined inRFC 3862.  Such applications SHOULD   recognize the CC header field, and MAY recognize the Subject header   field.  Any MSRP application that recognizes any message/cpim header   field MUST understand the NS (name space) header field.   All message/cpim body parts sent by an MSRP endpoint MUST include the   From and To header fields.  If the message/cpim body part is   protected using S/MIME, then it MUST also include the DateTime header   field.   The NS, To, and CC header fields may occur multiple times.  Other   header fields defined inRFC 3862 MUST NOT occur more than once in a   given message/cpim body part in an MSRP message.  The Require header   field MAY include multiple values.  The NS header field MAY occur   zero or more times, depending on how many name spaces are being   referenced.   Extension header fields MAY occur more than once, depending on the   definition of such header fields.      Using message/cpim envelopes is also useful if an MSRP device      wishes to send a message on behalf of some other identity.  The      device may add a message/cpim envelope with the appropriate From      header field value.14.  Security Considerations   Instant messaging systems are used to exchange a variety of sensitive   information ranging from personal conversations, to corporate   confidential information, to account numbers and other financial   trading information.  IM is used by individuals, corporations, and   governments for communicating important information.  IM systems need   to provide the properties of integrity and confidentiality for the   exchanged information, and the knowledge that you are communicating   with the correct party, and they need to allow the possibility of   anonymous communication.  MSRP pushes many of the hard problems to   SIP when SIP sets up the session, but some of the problems remain.   Spam and Denial of Service (DoS) attacks are also very relevant to IM   systems.   MSRP needs to provide confidentiality and integrity for the messages   it transfers.  It also needs to provide assurances that the connected   host is the host that it meant to connect to and that the connection   has not been hijacked.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 49]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 200714.1.  Secrecy of the MSRP URI   When an endpoint sends an MSRP URI to its peer in a rendezvous   protocol, that URI is effectively a secret shared between the peers.   If an attacker learns or guesses the URI prior to the completion of   session setup, it may be able to impersonate one of the peers.   Assuming the URI exchange in the rendezvous protocol is sufficiently   protected, it is critical that the URI remain difficult to "guess"   via brute force methods.  Most components of the URI, such as the   scheme and the authority components, are common knowledge.  The   secrecy is entirely provided by the session-id component.   Therefore, when an MSRP device generates an MSRP URI to be used in   the initiation of an MSRP session, the session-id component MUST   contain at least 80 bits of randomness.14.2.  Transport Level Protection   When using only TCP connections, MSRP security is fairly weak.  If   host A is contacting host B, B passes its hostname and a secret to A   using a rendezvous protocol.  Although MSRP requires the use of a   rendezvous protocol with the ability to protect this exchange, there   is no guarantee that the protection will be used all the time.  If   such protection is not used, anyone can see this secret.  Host A then   connects to the provided hostname and passes the secret in the clear   across the connection to B.  Host A assumes that it is talking to B   based on where it sent the SYN packet and then delivers the secret in   plain text across the connections.  Host B assumes it is talking to A   because the host on the other end of the connection delivered the   secret.  An attacker that could ACK the SYN packet could insert   itself as a man-in-the-middle in the connection.   When using TLS connections, the security is significantly improved.   We assume that the host accepting the connection has a certificate   from a well-known certification authority.  Furthermore, we assume   that the signaling to set up the session is protected by the   rendezvous protocol.  In this case, when host A contacts host B, the   secret is passed through a confidential channel to A.  A connects   with TLS to B.  B presents a valid certificate, so A knows it really   is connected to B.  A then delivers the secret provided by B, so that   B can verify it is connected to A.  In this case, a rogue SIP Proxy   can see the secret in the SIP signaling traffic and could potentially   insert itself as a man-in-the-middle.   Realistically, using TLS with certificates from well-known   certification authorities is difficult for peer-to-peer connections,   as the types of hosts that end clients use for sending instantCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 50]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   messages are unlikely to have long-term stable IP addresses or DNS   names that the certificates can bind to.  In addition, the cost of   server certificates from well-known certification authorities is   currently expensive enough to discourage their use for each client.   Using TLS in a peer-to-peer mode without well-known certificates is   discussed inSection 14.4.   TLS becomes much more practical when some form of relay is   introduced.  Clients can then form TLS connections to relays, which   are much more likely to have TLS certificates.  While this   specification does not address such relays, they are described by a   companion document [23].  That document makes extensive use of TLS to   protect traffic between clients and relays, and between one relay and   another.   TLS is used to authenticate devices and to provide integrity and   confidentiality for the header fields being transported.  MSRP   elements MUST implement TLS and MUST also implement the TLS   ClientExtendedHello extended hello information for server name   indication as described in [11].  A TLS cipher-suite of   TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA [13] MUST be supported (other cipher-   suites MAY also be supported).14.3.  S/MIME   The only strong security for non-TLS connections is achieved using   S/MIME.   Since MSRP carries arbitrary MIME content, it can trivially carry   S/MIME protected messages as well.  All MSRP implementations MUST   support the multipart/signed media-type even if they do not support   S/MIME.  Since SIP can carry a session key, S/MIME messages in the   context of a session could also be protected using a key-wrapped   shared secret [28] provided in the session setup.  MSRP can carry   unencoded binary payloads.  Therefore, MIME bodies MUST be   transferred with a transfer encoding of binary.  If a message is both   signed and encrypted, it SHOULD be signed first, then encrypted.  If   S/MIME is supported, SHA-1, SHA-256, RSA, and AES-128 MUST be   supported.  For RSA, implementations MUST support key sizes of at   least 1024 bits and SHOULD support key sizes of 2048 bits or more.   This does not actually require the endpoint to have certificates from   a well-known certification authority.  When MSRP is used with SIP,   the Identity [17] and Certificates [25] mechanisms provide S/MIME-   based delivery of a secret between A and B.  No SIP intermediary   except the explicitly trusted authentication service (one per user)   can see the secret.  The S/MIME encryption of the SDP can also be   used by SIP to exchange keying material that can be used in MSRP.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 51]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   The MSRP session can then use S/MIME with this keying material to   sign and encrypt messages sent over MSRP.  The connection can still   be hijacked since the secret is sent in clear text to the other end   of the TCP connection, but the consequences are mitigated if all the   MSRP content is signed and encrypted with S/MIME.  Although out of   scope for this document, the SIP negotiation of an MSRP session can   negotiate symmetric keying material to be used with S/MIME for   integrity and privacy.14.4.  Using TLS in Peer-to-Peer Mode   TLS can be used with a self-signed certificate as long as there is a   mechanism for both sides to ascertain that the other side used the   correct certificate.  When used with SDP and SIP, the correct   certificate can be verified by passing a fingerprint of the   certificate in the SDP and ensuring that the SDP has suitable   integrity protection.  When SIP is used to transport the SDP, the   integrity can be provided by the SIP Identity mechanism [17].  The   rest of this section describes the details of this approach.   If self-signed certificates are used, the content of the   subjectAltName attribute inside the certificate MAY use the URI of   the user.  In SIP, this URI of the user is the User's Address of   Record (AOR).  This is useful for debugging purposes only and is not   required to bind the certificate to one of the communication   endpoints.  Unlike normal TLS operations in this protocol, when doing   peer-to-peer TLS, the subjectAltName is not an important component of   the certificate verification.  If the endpoint is also able to make   anonymous sessions, a distinct, unique certificate MUST be used for   this purpose.  For a client that works with multiple users, each user   SHOULD have its own certificate.  Because the generation of   public/private key pairs is relatively expensive, endpoints are not   required to generate certificates for each session.   A certificate fingerprint is the output of a one-way hash function   computed over the Distinguished Encoding Rules (DER) form of the   certificate.  The endpoint MUST use the certificate fingerprint   attribute as specified in [18] and MUST include this in the SDP.  The   certificate presented during the TLS handshake needs to match the   fingerprint exchanged via the SDP, and if the fingerprint does not   match the hashed certificate then the endpoint MUST tear down the   media session immediately.   When using SIP, the integrity of the fingerprint can be ensured   through the SIP Identity mechanism [17].  When a client wishes to use   SIP to set up a secure MSRP session with another endpoint, it sends   an SDP offer in a SIP message to the other endpoint.  This offer   includes, as part of the SDP payload, the fingerprint of theCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 52]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   certificate that the endpoint wants to use.  The SIP message   containing the offer is sent to the offerer's SIP proxy, which will   add an Identity header according to the procedures outlined in [17].   When the far endpoint receives the SIP message, it can verify the   identity of the sender using the Identity header.  Since the Identity   header is a digital signature across several SIP headers, in addition   to the body or bodies of the SIP message, the receiver can also be   certain that the message has not been tampered with after the digital   signature was added to the SIP message.   An example of SDP with a fingerprint attribute is shown in the   following figure.  Note the fingerprint is shown spread over two   lines due to formatting consideration but should all be on one line.   c=IN IP4 atlanta.example.com   m=message 7654 TCP/TLS/MSRP *   a=accept-types:text/plain   a=path:msrps://atlanta.example.com:7654/jshA7weso3ks;tcp   a=fingerprint:SHA-1 \         4A:AD:B9:B1:3F:82:18:3B:54:02:12:DF:3E:5D:49:6B:19:E5:7C:AB                 Figure 19: SDP with Fingerprint Attribute14.5.  Other Security Concerns   MSRP cannot be used as an amplifier for DoS attacks, but it can be   used to form a distributed attack to consume TCP connection resources   on servers.  The attacker, Mallory, sends a SIP INVITE with no offer   to Alice.  Alice returns a 200 with an offer and Mallory returns an   answer with SDP indicating that his MSRP address is the address of   Tom.  Since Alice sent the offer, Alice will initiate a connection to   Tom using up resources on Tom's server.  Given the huge number of IM   clients, and the relatively few TCP connections that most servers   support, this is a fairly straightforward attack.   SIP is attempting to address issues in dealing with spam.  The spam   issue is probably best dealt with at the SIP level when an MSRP   session is initiated and not at the MSRP level.   If a sender chooses to employ S/MIME to protect a message, all S/MIME   operations apply to the complete message, prior to any breaking of   the message into chunks.   The signaling will have set up the session to or from some specific   URIs that will often have "im:" or "sip:" URI schemes.  When the   signaling has been set up to a specific end user, and S/MIME is   implemented, then the client needs to verify that the name in the   SubjectAltName of the certificate contains an entry that matches theCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 53]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   URI that was used for the other end in the signaling.  There are some   cases, such as IM conferencing, where the S/MIME certificate name and   the signaled identity will not match.  In these cases, the client   should ensure that the user is informed that the message came from   the user identified in the certificate and does not assume that the   message came from the party they signaled.   In some cases, a sending device may need to attribute a message to   some other identity, and may use different identities for different   messages in the same session.  For example, a conference server may   send messages on behalf of multiple users on the same session.   Rather than add additional header fields to MSRP for this purpose,   MSRP relies on the message/cpim format for this purpose.  The sender   may envelop such a message in a message/cpim body, and place the   actual sender identity in the From field.  The trustworthiness of   such an attribution is affected by the security properties of the   session in the same way that the trustworthiness of the identity of   the actual peer is affected, with the additional issue of determining   whether the recipient trusts the sender to assert the identity.   This approach can result in nesting of message/cpim envelopes.  For   example, a message originates from a CPIM gateway, and is then   forwarded by a conference server onto a new session.  Both the   gateway and the conference server introduce envelopes.  In this case,   the recipient client SHOULD indicate the chain of identity assertions   to the user, rather than allow the user to assume that either the   gateway or the conference server originated the message.   It is possible that a recipient might receive messages that are   attributed to the same sender via different MSRP sessions.  For   example, Alice might be in a conversation with Bob via an MSRP   session over a TLS protected channel.  Alice might then receive a   different message from Bob over a different session, perhaps with a   conference server that asserts Bob's identity in a message/cpim   envelope signed by the server.   MSRP does not prohibit multiple simultaneous sessions between the   same pair of identities.  Nor does it prohibit an endpoint sending a   message on behalf of another identity, such as may be the case for a   conference server.  The recipient's endpoint should determine its   level of trust of the authenticity of the sender independently for   each session.  The fact that an endpoint trusts the authenticity of   the sender on any given session should not affect the level of trust   it assigns for apparently the same sender on a different session.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 54]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   When MSRP clients form or acquire a certificate, they SHOULD ensure   that the subjectAltName has a GeneralName entry of type   uniformResourceIdentifier for each URI corresponding to this client   and should always include an "im:" URI.  It is fine if the   certificate contains other URIs such as "sip:" or "xmpp:" URIs.   MSRP implementors should be aware of a potential attack on MSRP   devices that involves placing very large values in the byte-range   header field, potentially causing the device to allocate very large   memory buffers to hold the message.  Implementations SHOULD apply   some degree of sanity checking on byte-range values before allocating   such buffers.15.  IANA Considerations   This specification instructs IANA to create a new registry for MSRP   parameters.  The MSRP Parameter registry is a container for sub-   registries.  This section further introduces sub-registries for MSRP   method names, status codes, and header field names.   Additionally,Section 15.4 throughSection 15.7 register new   parameters in existing IANA registries.15.1.  MSRP Method Names   This specification establishes the Methods sub-registry under MSRP   Parameters and initiates its population as follows.  New parameters   in this sub-registry must be published in an RFC (either as an IETF   submission or RFC Editor submission).      SEND - [RFC4975]      REPORT - [RFC4975]   The following information MUST be provided in an RFC publication in   order to register a new MSRP method:   o  The method name.   o  The RFC number in which the method is registered.15.2.  MSRP Header Fields   This specification establishes the header field-Field sub-registry   under MSRP Parameters.  New parameters in this sub-registry must be   published in an RFC (either as an IETF submission or RFC Editor   submission).  Its initial population is defined as follows:Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 55]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007      To-Path - [RFC4975]      From-Path - [RFC4975]      Message-ID - [RFC4975]      Success-Report - [RFC4975]      Failure-Report - [RFC4975]      Byte-Range - [RFC4975]      Status - [RFC4975]   The following information MUST be provided in an RFC publication in   order to register a new MSRP header field:   o  The header field name.   o  The RFC number in which the method is registered.15.3.  MSRP Status Codes   This specification establishes the Status-Code sub-registry under   MSRP Parameters.  New parameters in this sub-registry must be   published in an RFC (either as an IETF submission or RFC Editor   submission).  Its initial population is defined inSection 10.  It   takes the following format:      Code [RFC Number]   The following information MUST be provided in an RFC publication in   order to register a new MSRP status code:   o  The status code number.   o  The RFC number in which the method is registered.15.4.  MSRP Port   MSRP uses TCP port 2855, from the "registered" port range.  Usage of   this value is described inSection 6.15.5.  URI Schema   This document requests permanent registration the URI schemes of   "msrp" and "msrps".15.5.1.  MSRP Scheme   URI Scheme Name:  "msrp"   URI Scheme Syntax:  See the ABNF construction for "MSRP-URI" inSection 9 of RFC 4975.   URI Scheme Semantics:  SeeSection 6 of RFC 4975.   Encoding Considerations:  SeeSection 6 of RFC 4975.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 56]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   Applications/Protocols that use this URI Scheme:  The Message Session      Relay Protocol (MSRP).   Interoperability Considerations:  MSRP URIs are expected to be used      only by implementations of MSRP.  No additional interoperability      issues are expected.   Security Considerations:  SeeSection 14.1 of RFC 4975 for specific      security considerations for MSRP URIs, andSection 14 of RFC 4975      for security considerations for MSRP in general.   Contact:  Ben Campbell (ben@estacado.net).   Author/Change Controller:  This is a permanent registration request.      Change control does not apply.15.5.2.  MSRPS Scheme   URI Scheme Name:  "msrps"   URI Scheme Syntax:  See the ABNF construction for "MSRP-URI" inSection 9 of RFC 4975.   URI Scheme Semantics:  SeeSection 6 of RFC 4975.   Encoding Considerations:  SeeSection 6 of RFC 4975.   Applications/Protocols that use this URI Scheme:  The Message Session      Relay Protocol (MSRP).   Interoperability Considerations:  MSRP URIs are expected to be used      only by implementations of MSRP.  No additional interoperability      issues are expected.   Security Considerations:  SeeSection 14.1 of RFC 4975 for specific      security considerations for MSRP URIs, andSection 14 of RFC 4975      for security considerations for MSRP in general.   Contact:  Ben Campbell (ben@estacado.net).   Author/Change Controller:  This is a permanent registration request.      Change control does not apply.15.6.  SDP Transport Protocol   MSRP defines the new SDP protocol field values "TCP/MSRP" and "TCP/   TLS/MSRP", which should be registered in the sdp-parameters registry   under "proto".  This first value indicates the MSRP protocol when TCP   is used as an underlying transport.  The second indicates that TLS   over TCP is used.   Specifications defining new protocol values must define the rules for   the associated media format namespace.  The "TCP/MSRP" and "TCP/TLS/   MSRP" protocol values allow only one value in the format field (fmt),   which is a single occurrence of "*".  Actual format determination is   made using the "accept-types" and "accept-wrapped-types" attributes.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 57]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 200715.7.  SDP Attribute Names   This document registers the following SDP attribute parameter names   in the sdp-parameters registry.  These names are to be used in the   SDP att-name field.15.7.1.  Accept Types   Contact Information:  Ben Campbell (ben@estacado.net)   Attribute-name:   accept-types   Long-form Attribute Name:  Acceptable media types   Type:  Media level   Subject to Charset Attribute:  No   Purpose and Appropriate Values:  The "accept-types" attribute      contains a list of media types that the endpoint is willing to      receive.  It may contain zero or more registered media-types, or      "*" in a space-delimited string.15.7.2.  Wrapped Types   Contact Information:  Ben Campbell (ben@estacado.net)   Attribute-name:   accept-wrapped-types   Long-form Attribute Name:  Acceptable media types Inside Wrappers   Type:  Media level   Subject to Charset Attribute:  No   Purpose and Appropriate Values:  The "accept-wrapped-types" attribute      contains a list of media types that the endpoint is willing to      receive in an MSRP message with multipart content, but may not be      used as the outermost type of the message.  It may contain zero or      more registered media-types, or "*" in a space-delimited string.15.7.3.  Max Size   Contact Information:  Ben Campbell (ben@estacado.net)   Attribute-name:   max-size   Long-form Attribute Name:  Maximum message size   Type:  Media level   Subject to Charset Attribute:  No   Purpose and Appropriate Values:  The "max-size" attribute indicates      the largest message an endpoint wishes to accept.  It may take any      whole numeric value, specified in octets.15.7.4.  Path   Contact Information:  Ben Campbell (ben@estacado.net)   Attribute-name:   path   Long-form Attribute Name:  MSRP URI Path   Type:  Media levelCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 58]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   Subject to Charset Attribute:  No   Purpose and Appropriate Values:  The "path" attribute indicates a      series of MSRP devices that must be visited by messages sent in      the session, including the final endpoint.  The attribute contains      one or more MSRP URIs, delimited by the space character.16.  Contributors and Acknowledgments   In addition to the editors, the following people contributed   extensive work to this document: Chris Boulton, Paul Kyzivat, Orit   Levin, Hans Persson, Adam Roach, Jonathan Rosenberg, and Robert   Sparks.   The following people contributed substantial discussion and feedback   to this ongoing effort: Eric Burger, Allison Mankin, Jon Peterson,   Brian Rosen, Dean Willis, Aki Niemi, Hisham Khartabil, Pekka Pessi,   Miguel Garcia, Peter Ridler, Sam Hartman, and Jean Mahoney.17.  References17.1.  Normative References   [1]   Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security (TLS)         Protocol Version 1.1",RFC 4346, April 2006.   [2]   Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session         Description Protocol",RFC 4566, July 2006.   [3]   Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "An Offer/Answer Model with         Session Description Protocol (SDP)",RFC 3264, June 2002.   [4]   Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A.,         Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E. Schooler, "SIP:         Session Initiation Protocol",RFC 3261, June 2002.   [5]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement         Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [6]   Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax         Specifications: ABNF",RFC 4234, October 2005.   [7]   Ramsdell, B., "Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions         (S/MIME) Version 3.1 Message Specification",RFC 3851, July         2004.   [8]   Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail         Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies",RFC 2045, November 1996.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 59]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   [9]   Troost, R., Dorner, S., and K. Moore, "Communicating         Presentation Information in Internet Messages: The Content-         Disposition Header Field",RFC 2183, August 1997.   [10]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform         Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,RFC 3986,         January 2005.   [11]  Blake-Wilson, S., Nystrom, M., Hopwood, D., Mikkelsen, J., and         T. Wright, "Transport Layer Security (TLS) Extensions",RFC4366, April 2006.   [12]  Klyne, G. and D. Atkins, "Common Presence and Instant Messaging         (CPIM): Message Format",RFC 3862, August 2004.   [13]  Chown, P., "Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) Ciphersuites for         Transport Layer Security (TLS)",RFC 3268, June 2002.   [14]  Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646", STD         63,RFC 3629, November 2003.   [15]  Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail         Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types",RFC 2046, November         1996.   [16]  Housley, R., Polk, W., Ford, W., and D. Solo, "Internet X.509         Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate         Revocation List (CRL) Profile",RFC 3280, April 2002.   [17]  Peterson, J. and  C. Jennings, "Enhancements for Authenticated         Identity Management in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 4474, August 2006.   [18]  Lennox, J., "Connection-Oriented Media Transport over the         Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol in the Session         Description Protocol (SDP)",RFC 4572, July 2006.17.2.  Informative References   [19]  Johnston, A. and O. Levin, "Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)         Call Control - Conferencing for User Agents",BCP 119,RFC4579, August 2006.   [20]  Rosenberg, J., Peterson, J., Schulzrinne, H., and G. Camarillo,         "Best Current Practices for Third Party Call Control (3pcc) in         the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",BCP 85,RFC 3725, April         2004.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 60]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007   [21]  Sparks, R., Johnston, A., and D. Petrie, "Session Initiation         Protocol Call Control - Transfer", Work in Progress, October         2006.   [22]  Campbell, B., Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Huitema, C., and         D. Gurle, "Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Extension for         Instant Messaging",RFC 3428, December 2002.   [23]  Jennings, C., Mahy, R., and A. Roach, "Relay Extensions for the         Message Session Relay Protocol (MSRP)",RFC 4976, September         2007.   [24]  Rosenberg, J., "The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) UPDATE         Method",RFC 3311, October 2002.   [25]  Jennings, C., Peterson, J., and J. Fischl, "Certificate         Management Service for SIP", Work in Progress, July 2007.   [26]  Yon, D. and G. Camarillo, "TCP-Based Media Transport in the         Session Description Protocol (SDP)",RFC 4145, September 2005.   [27]  Peterson, J., "Common Profile for Instant Messaging (CPIM)",RFC 3860, August 2004.   [28]  Housley, R., "Triple-DES and RC2 Key Wrapping",RFC 3217,         December 2001.   [29]  Camarillo, G. and H. Schulzrinne, "Early Media and Ringing Tone         Generation in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 3960,         December 2004.   [30]  Saint-Andre, P., "Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol         (XMPP): Instant Messaging and Presence",RFC 3921, October         2004.   [31]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and P. Kyzivat, "Indicating         User Agent Capabilities in the Session Initiation Protocol         (SIP)",RFC 3840, August 2004.   [32]  Peterson, J., "Address Resolution for Instant Messaging and         Presence",RFC 3861, August 2004.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 61]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007Authors' Addresses   Ben Campbell (editor)   Estacado Systems   17210 Campbell Road   Suite 250   Dallas, TX  75252   USA   EMail: ben@estacado.net   Rohan Mahy (editor)   Plantronics   345 Encincal Street   Santa Cruz, CA  95060   USA   EMail: rohan@ekabal.com   Cullen Jennings (editor)   Cisco Systems, Inc.   170 West Tasman Dr.   MS: SJC-21/2   San Jose, CA  95134   USA   Phone: +1 408 421-9990   EMail: fluffy@cisco.comCampbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 62]

RFC 4975                          MSRP                    September 2007Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND   THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS   OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF   THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Campbell, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 63]

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